%0 Journal Article %T Re %A Maria Puig de la Bellacasa %J The Sociological Review %@ 1467-954X %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0038026119830601 %X ¡®In a sense we are unique moist packages of animated soil¡¯. These are the alluring words of Francis D. Hole, a professor of soil science renowned for encouraging love for the soil and understanding of its vital importance. Affirming humans as being soil entangles them in substantial commonness. This article explores how altering the imaginaries of soils as inert matter subjected to human use and re-animating the life within them is transforming contemporary human¨Csoil affections by developing a sense of shared aliveness. Presenting research on current practices, material involvements and stories emerging from scientific accounts, community involvements and artistic manifestations, I propose five emerging motifs of renewed imaginaries of soil¡¯s aliveness that feed into each other to affirm intimate entanglements of human¨Csoil matter. I argue that while a vision of anthropocenic soils invokes yet another objectified natural resource brought to exhaustion by a deadly human-centred productionist ethos, as soils are re-animated and enlivened, a sense of human¨Csoil entangled and intimate interdependency is intensified. These new involvements with soil¡¯s aliveness open up a sense of earthy connectedness that animates and re-affects material worlds and a sense of more than human community in those involved %K aliveness %K care %K material spirituality %K more than human %K scientific imaginaries %K soil %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0038026119830601