Water Powers: Sacred Aquatic Animals of the Asia-Pacific

Hardback: $80.00
ISBN-13: 9798880702084
Published: April 2026
You must register to use the waitlist feature. Please login or create an account

Additional Information

344 pages | 20 b&w illustrations, 2 maps
  • About the Book
  • Water Powers is an interdisciplinary collection that presents timely, original research on sacred aquatic animals—from dragons and nagas to crocodiles, eels, dugongs, and whales—and environmental change. Contributors examine the past and present significance of these creatures in Nepal, India, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, China, Japan, Okinawa, Indonesia, and Aotearoa-New Zealand to explore the diverse relationships between animals, deities, humans, and bodies of water. In so doing, they challenge narratives about disenchantment as a core aspect of modernization, seeking to give the sacred creatures and the rituals associated with them a more central place in debates about environmental degradation and conservation initiatives. Their work converges around three core themes: (1) divine embodiment and materiality (how sacred beings manifest themselves and act in the world); (2) making and crossing boundaries (how aquatic animals are constrained by but also challenge physical, ontological, and conceptual boundaries); and (3) crises and relationality (how more-than-human relationships change in response to environmental and other crises).

    Water Powers will appeal to scholars and students across multiple fields, including anthropology, religious studies, environmental humanities, geography, development studies, history, and archaeology. The book will also interest development experts, conservationists, museum curators, and readers engaged with culture, religion, and environmental change in the Asia-Pacific region.

  • About the Author(s)
    • Aike P. Rots, Editor

      Aike P. Rots is a professor in Asian studies at the University of Oslo who specializes in religion and the environment in East Asia.
    • Florence Durney, Editor

      Florence Durney is an environmental anthropologist and postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Oslo.
    • Lindsey DeWitt Prat, Editor

      Lindsey DeWitt Prat is a director of research at Bold Insight and conducts research on language, culture, and religion in Japan and globally.
    • Sonja Åman, Editor

      Sonja Åman is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Oslo Center of Environmental Humanities, University of Oslo.

    Contributors

    • Sonja Åman
    • Barbara R. Ambros
    • Darmanto Darmanto
    • Susan M. Darlington
    • Lindsey DeWitt Prat
    • Georgina Drew
    • Florence Durney
    • Kathryn Dyt
    • Fynn Holm
    • Andrew Alan Johnson
    • Tuan Anh Nguyen
    • Evan Nicoll-Johnson
    • Marius Palz
    • Gerard Persoon
    • Victoria C. Ramenzoni
    • Aike P. Rots
    • Veronica Walker Vadillo