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keruuseen

Keruuseen is a term used in contemporary speculative fiction and some tabletop role-playing materials to describe a ritual practice or mechanism by which a community attempts to draw resources or energy from the environment during particular cycles. As a neologism, its precise definition varies between works, and there is no single canonical description.

In most depictions, keruuseen consists of phases such as preparation, invocation, gathering or harvest, and relinquishment.

Keruuseen appears across different settings with variations in ritual specifics, such as the nature of offerings,

In real-world scholarship, keruuseen is treated as a fictional construct used to explore themes of resource

Related concepts include ritual, harvest festival, energy economy in fiction, and neologisms.

The
practice
is
typically
linked
to
seasonal
or
celestial
cycles
and
is
framed
as
a
reciprocal
relationship
between
humans
and
the
surrounding
ecosystem
or
with
unseen
agents
anthropomorphized
as
guardians
or
spirits.
Participant
actions
may
include
symbolic
offerings,
songs,
chants,
or
the
arrangement
of
physical
objects
to
focus
intention.
the
governing
timetable,
and
the
entities
that
oversee
the
process.
Some
works
cast
it
as
a
communal
practice
reinforcing
social
bonds;
others
present
it
as
a
private
or
secret
rite
with
ethical
implications
regarding
balance
and
consent
of
non-human
actors.
dependence,
ritual
economies,
and
world-building
dynamics.
Critics
discuss
its
plausibility,
function
as
a
narrative
device,
and
potential
parallels
with
real
harvest
or
rite-of-passage
customs.
Proponents
argue
that
it
provides
a
versatile
framework
for
examining
environmental
ethics
in
storytelling.