fbpx
Wikipedia

Shamanism

Shamanism is a religious practice that involves a practitioner (shaman) interacting with what they believe to be a spirit world through altered states of consciousness, such as trance.[1][2] The goal of this is usually to direct spirits or spiritual energies into the physical world for the purpose of healing, divination, or to aid human beings in some other way.[1]

Beliefs and practices categorized as "shamanic" have attracted the interest of scholars from a variety of disciplines, including anthropologists, archeologists, historians, religious studies scholars, philosophers and psychologists. Hundreds of books and academic papers on the subject have been produced, with a peer-reviewed academic journal being devoted to the study of shamanism.

In the 20th century, non-Indigenous Westerners involved in countercultural movements, such as hippies and the New Age created modern magicoreligious practices influenced by their ideas of various Indigenous religions, creating what has been termed neoshamanism or the neoshamanic movement.[3] It has affected the development of many neopagan practices, as well as faced a backlash and accusations of cultural appropriation,[4] exploitation and misrepresentation when outside observers have tried to practice the ceremonies of, or represent, centuries-old cultures to which they do not belong.[5]

Terminology

Etymology

 
The earliest known depiction of a Siberian shaman, by the Dutch Nicolaes Witsen, 17th century. Witsen called him a "priest of the Devil" and drew clawed feet for the supposed demonic qualities.[6]

The Modern English word shamanism derives from the Russian word šamán, which itself comes from the word samān from a Tungusic language[7] – possibly from the southwestern dialect of the Evenki spoken by the Sym Evenki peoples,[8] or from the Manchu language.[9] The etymology of the word is sometimes connected to the Tungus root sā-, meaning "to know".[10][11] However, Finnish ethnolinguist Juha Janhunen questions this connection on linguistic grounds: "The possibility cannot be completely rejected, but neither should it be accepted without reservation since the assumed derivational relationship is phonologically irregular (note especially the vowel quantities)."[12]

Mircea Eliade noted that the Sanskrit word śramaṇa, designating a wandering monastic or holy figure, has spread to many Central Asian languages along with Buddhism and could be the ultimate origin of the word shaman.[13]

The term was adopted by Russians interacting with the Indigenous peoples in Siberia. It is found in the memoirs of the exiled Russian churchman Avvakum.[14] It was brought to Western Europe twenty years later by the Dutch traveler Nicolaes Witsen, who reported his stay and journeys among the Tungusic- and Samoyedic-speaking Indigenous peoples of Siberia in his book Noord en Oost Tataryen (1692).[15] Adam Brand, a merchant from Lübeck, published in 1698 his account of a Russian embassy to China; a translation of his book, published the same year, introduced the word shaman to English speakers.[16]

Anthropologist and archeologist Silvia Tomaskova argued that by the mid-1600s, many Europeans applied the Arabic term shaitan (meaning "devil") to the non-Christian practices and beliefs of Indigenous peoples beyond the Ural Mountains.[17] She suggests that shaman may have entered the various Tungus dialects as a corruption of this term, and then been told to Christian missionaries, explorers, soldiers and colonial administrators with whom the people had increasing contact for centuries.

A female shaman is sometimes called a shamanka, which is not an actual Tungus term but simply shaman plus the Russian suffix -ka (for feminine nouns).[18]

Definitions

 
A shaman, probably Khakas, Russian Empire, 1908[19]

There is no single agreed-upon definition for the word "shamanism" among anthropologists. Thomas Downson suggests three shared elements of shamanism: practitioners consistently alter consciousness, the community regards altering consciousness as an important ritual practice, and the knowledge about the practice is controlled.

The English historian Ronald Hutton noted that by the dawn of the 21st century, there were four separate definitions of the term which appeared to be in use:

  • The first of these uses the term to refer to "anybody who contacts a spirit world while in an altered state of consciousness".
  • The second definition limits the term to refer to those who contact a spirit world while in an altered state of consciousness at the behest of others.
  • The third definition attempts to distinguish shamans from other magicoreligious specialists who are believed to contact spirits, such as "mediums", "witch doctors", "spiritual healers" or "prophets," by claiming that shamans undertake some particular technique not used by the others. (Problematically, scholars advocating the third view have failed to agree on what the defining technique should be.)
  • The fourth definition identified by Hutton uses "shamanism" to refer to the Indigenous religions of Siberia and neighboring parts of Asia.[20] According to the Golomt Center for Shamanic Studies, a Mongolian organization of shamans, the Evenk word shaman would more accurately be translated as "priest".[21]

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a shaman (/ˈʃɑːmən/ SHAH-men, /ˈʃæmən/ or /ˈʃmən/)[22] is someone who is regarded as having access to, and influence in, the world of benevolent and malevolent spirits, who typically enters into a trance state during a ritual, and practices divination and healing.[1][22] The word "shaman" probably originates from the Tungusic Evenki language of North Asia. According to Juha Janhunen, "the word is attested in all of the Tungusic idioms" such as Negidal, Lamut, Udehe/Orochi, Nanai, Ilcha, Orok, Manchu and Ulcha, and "nothing seems to contradict the assumption that the meaning 'shaman' also derives from Proto-Tungusic" and may have roots that extend back in time at least two millennia.[23] The term was introduced to the west after Russian forces conquered the shamanistic Khanate of Kazan in 1552.

The term "shamanism" was first applied by Western anthropologists as outside observers of the ancient religion of the Turks and Mongols, as well as those of the neighbouring Tungusic- and Samoyedic-speaking peoples. Upon observing more religious traditions around the world, some Western anthropologists began to also use the term in a very broad sense. The term was used to describe unrelated magicoreligious practices found within the ethnic religions of other parts of Asia, Africa, Australasia and even completely unrelated parts of the Americas, as they believed these practices to be similar to one another.[24] While the term has been incorrectly applied by cultural outsiders to many Indigenous spiritual practices, the words “shaman” and “shamanism” do not accurately describe the variety and complexity that is Indigenous spirituality. Each nation and tribe has its own way of life, and uses terms in their own languages.[25]

Mircea Eliade writes, "A first definition of this complex phenomenon, and perhaps the least hazardous, will be: shamanism = 'technique of religious ecstasy'."[26] Shamanism encompasses the premise that shamans are intermediaries or messengers between the human world and the spirit worlds. Shamans are said to treat ailments and illnesses by mending the soul. Alleviating traumas affecting the soul or spirit are believed to restore the physical body of the individual to balance and wholeness. Shamans also claim to enter supernatural realms or dimensions to obtain solutions to problems afflicting the community. Shamans claim to visit other worlds or dimensions to bring guidance to misguided souls and to ameliorate illnesses of the human soul caused by foreign elements. Shamans operate primarily within the spiritual world, which, they believe, in turn affects the human world. The restoration of balance is said to result in the elimination of the ailment.[26]

Criticism of the term

 
A tableau presenting figures of various cultures filling in mediator-like roles, often being termed as "shaman" in the literature. The tableau presents the diversity of this concept.

The anthropologist Alice Kehoe criticizes the term "shaman" in her book Shamans and Religion: An Anthropological Exploration in Critical Thinking. Part of this criticism involves the notion of cultural appropriation.[4] This includes criticism of New Age and modern Western forms of shamanism, which, according to Kehoe, misrepresent or dilute Indigenous practices. Kehoe also believes that the term reinforces racist ideas such as the noble savage.

Kehoe is highly critical of Mircea Eliade's work on shamanism as an invention synthesized from various sources unsupported by more direct research. To Kehoe, citing that ritualistic practices (most notably drumming, trance, chanting, entheogens and hallucinogens, spirit communication and healing) as being definitive of shamanism is poor practice. Such citations ignore the fact that those practices exist outside of what is defined as shamanism and play similar roles even in nonshamanic cultures (such as the role of chanting in rituals in Abrahamic religions) and that in their expression are unique to each culture that uses them. Such practices cannot be generalized easily, accurately, or usefully into a global religion of shamanism. Because of this, Kehoe is also highly critical of the hypothesis that shamanism is an ancient, unchanged, and surviving religion from the Paleolithic period.[4]

The term has been criticized[by whom?] for its perceived colonial roots, and as a tool to perpetuate perceived contemporary linguistic colonialism. By Western scholars, the term "shamanism" is used to refer to a variety of different cultures and practices around the world, which can vary dramatically and may not be accurately represented by a single concept. Billy-Ray Belcourt, an author and award-winning scholar from the Driftpile Cree Nation in Canada, argues that using language with the intention of simplifying culture that is diverse, such as Shamanism, as it is prevalent in communities around the world and is made up of many complex components, works to conceal the complexities of the social and political violence that Indigenous communities have experienced at the hands of settlers.[27] Belcourt argues that language used to imply “simplicity” in regards to Indigenous culture, is a tool used to belittle Indigenous cultures, as it views Indigenous communities solely as a result of a history embroiled in violence, that leaves Indigenous communities only capable of simplicity and plainness.

Anthropologist Mihály Hoppál also discusses whether the term "shamanism" is appropriate. He notes that for many readers, "-ism" implies a particular dogma, like Buddhism or Judaism. He recommends using the term "shamanhood"[28] or "shamanship"[29] (a term used in old Russian and German ethnographic reports at the beginning of the 20th century) for stressing the diversity and the specific features of the discussed cultures. He believes that this places more stress on the local variations[10] and emphasizes that shamanism is not a religion of sacred dogmas, but linked to the everyday life in a practical way.[30] Following similar thoughts, he also conjectures a contemporary paradigm shift.[28] Piers Vitebsky also mentions that, despite really astonishing similarities, there is no unity in shamanism. The various, fragmented shamanistic practices and beliefs coexist with other beliefs everywhere. There is no record of pure shamanistic societies (although their existence is not impossible).[31] Norwegian social anthropologist Hakan Rydving has likewise argued for the abandonment of the terms "shaman" and "shamanism" as "scientific illusions."[32]

Dulam Bumochir has affirmed the above critiques of "shamanism" as a Western construct created for comparative purposes and, in an extensive article, has documented the role of Mongols themselves, particularly "the partnership of scholars and shamans in the reconstruction of shamanism" in post-1990/post-communist Mongolia.[33] This process has also been documented by Swiss anthropologist Judith Hangartner in her landmark study of Darhad shamans in Mongolia.[34] Historian Karena Kollmar-Polenz argues that the social construction and reification of shamanism as a religious "other" actually began with the 18th-century writings of Tibetan Buddhist monks in Mongolia and later "probably influenced the formation of European discourse on Shamanism".[35]

History

Shamanism is a system of religious practice.[36] Historically, it is often associated with Indigenous and tribal societies, and involves belief that shamans, with a connection to the otherworld, have the power to heal the sick, communicate with spirits, and escort souls of the dead to the afterlife. The origins of Shamanism stem from indigenous peoples of far northern Europe and Siberia.[37]

Despite structural implications of colonialism and imperialism that have limited the ability of Indigenous peoples to practice traditional spiritualities, many communities are undergoing resurgence through self-determination[38] and the reclamation of dynamic traditions.[39] Other groups have been able to avoid some of these structural impediments by virtue of their isolation, such as the nomadic Tuvan (with an estimated population of 3000 people surviving from this tribe).[40] Tuva is one of the most isolated Asiatic tribes in Russia where the art of shamanism has been preserved until today due to its isolated existence, allowing it to be free from the influences of other major religions.[41]

Beliefs

There are many variations of shamanism throughout the world, but several common beliefs are shared by all forms of shamanism. Common beliefs identified by Eliade (1972)[26] are the following:

  • Spirits exist and they play important roles both in individual lives and in human society
  • The shaman can communicate with the spirit world
  • Spirits can be benevolent or malevolent
  • The shaman can treat sickness caused by malevolent spirits
  • The shaman can employ trances inducing techniques to incite visionary ecstasy and go on vision quests
  • The shaman's spirit can leave the body to enter the supernatural world to search for answers
  • The shaman evokes animal images as spirit guides, omens, and message-bearers
  • The shaman can perform other varied forms of divination, scry, throw bones or runes, and sometimes foretell of future events

As Alice Kehoe[4] notes, Eliade's conceptualization of shamans produces a universalist image of Indigenous cultures, which perpetuates notions of the dead (or dying) Indian[42] as well as the noble savage.[43]

Shamanism is based on the premise that the visible world is pervaded by invisible forces or spirits which affect the lives of the living.[44] Although the causes of disease lie in the spiritual realm, inspired by malicious spirits, both spiritual and physical methods are used to heal. Commonly, a shaman "enters the body" of the patient to confront the spiritual infirmity and heals by banishing the infectious spirit.

Many shamans have expert knowledge of medicinal plants native to their area, and an herbal treatment is often prescribed. In many places shamans learn directly from the plants, harnessing their effects and healing properties, after obtaining permission from the indwelling or patron spirits. In the Peruvian Amazon Basin, shamans and curanderos use medicine songs called icaros to evoke spirits. Before a spirit can be summoned it must teach the shaman its song.[44] The use of totemic items such as rocks with special powers and an animating spirit is common.

Such practices are presumably very ancient. Plato wrote in his Phaedrus that the "first prophecies were the words of an oak", and that those who lived at that time found it rewarding enough to "listen to an oak or a stone, so long as it was telling the truth".

Belief in witchcraft and sorcery, known as brujería in Latin America, exists in many societies. Other societies assert all shamans have the power to both cure and kill. Those with shamanic knowledge usually enjoy great power and prestige in the community, but they may also be regarded suspiciously or fearfully as potentially harmful to others.[45]

By engaging in their work, a shaman is exposed to significant personal risk as shamanic plant materials can be toxic or fatal if misused. Spells are commonly used in an attempt to protect against these dangers, and the use of more dangerous plants is often very highly ritualized.

Soul and spirit concepts

Soul
Soul can generally explain more, seemingly unassociated phenomena in shamanism:[46][47][48]
Healing
Healing may be based closely on the soul concepts of the belief system of the people served by the shaman.[49] It may consist of the supposed retrieving the lost soul of the ill person.[50]
Scarcity of hunted game
Scarcity of hunted game can be solved by "releasing" the souls of the animals from their hidden abodes. Besides that, many taboos may prescribe the behavior of people towards game, so that the souls of the animals do not feel angry or hurt, or the pleased soul of the already killed prey can tell the other, still living animals, that they can allow themselves to be caught and killed.[51][52]
Infertility of women
Infertility of women is thought to be cured by obtaining the soul of the expected child[citation needed]
Spirits
Spirits are invisible entities that only shamans can see. They are seen as persons that can assume a human or animal body.[53] Some animals in their physical forms are also seen as spirits such as the case of the eagle, snake, jaguar, and rat.[53] Beliefs related to spirits can explain many different phenomena.[54] For example, the importance of storytelling, or acting as a singer, can be understood better if the whole belief system is examined. A person who can memorize long texts or songs, and play an instrument, may be regarded as the beneficiary of contact with the spirits (e.g. Khanty people).[55]

Practice

Generally, shamans traverse the axis mundi and enter the "spirit world" by effecting a transition of consciousness, entering into an ecstatic trance, either autohypnotically or through the use of entheogens or ritual performances.[56][57] The methods employed are diverse, and are often used together.

Entheogens

 
Flowering San Pedro, an entheogenic cactus that has been used for over 3,000 years.[58] Today the vast majority of extracted mescaline is from columnar cacti, not vulnerable peyote.[59]

An entheogen ("generating the divine within")[60] is a psychoactive substance used in a religious, shamanic, or spiritual context.[61] Entheogens have been used in a ritualized context, in a number of different cultures, possibly for thousands of years. Examples of substances used by some cultures as entheogens include: peyote,[62] Echinopsis pachanoi,[63] psilocybin and Amanita muscaria (fly agaric) mushrooms,[64] uncured tobacco,[65] cannabis,[66] ayahuasca,[67] Salvia divinorum,[68] and iboga.[69]

Entheogens also have a substantial history of commodification, especially in the realm of spiritual tourism. For instance, countries such as Brazil and Peru have faced an influx of tourists since the psychedelic era beginning in the late 1960s, initiating what has been termed "ayahuasca tourism."[70]

Music and songs

Just like shamanism itself,[10] music and songs related to it in various cultures are diverse. In several instances, songs related to shamanism are intended to imitate natural sounds, via onomatopoeia.[71]

Sound mimesis in various cultures may serve other functions not necessarily related to shamanism: practical goals such as luring game in the hunt;[72] or entertainment (Inuit throat singing).[72][73]

Initiation and learning

Shamans often claim to have been called through dreams or signs. However, some say their powers are inherited. In traditional societies shamanic training varies in length, but generally takes years.

Turner and colleagues[74] mention a phenomenon called "shamanistic initiatory crisis", a rite of passage for shamans-to-be, commonly involving physical illness or psychological crisis. The significant role of initiatory illnesses in the calling of a shaman can be found in the case history of Chuonnasuan, who was one of the last shamans among the Tungus peoples in Northeast China.[75]

The wounded healer is an archetype for a shamanic trial and journey. This process is important to young shamans. They undergo a type of sickness that pushes them to the brink of death. This is said to happen for two reasons:

  • The shaman crosses over to the underworld. This happens so the shaman can venture to its depths to bring back vital information for the sick and the tribe.
  • The shaman must become sick to understand sickness. When the shaman overcomes their own sickness, they believe that they will hold the cure to heal all that suffer.[76]

Other practices

Items used in spiritual practice

Shamans may employ varying materials in spiritual practice in different cultures.

 
Goldes shaman priest in his regalia
  • Drums – The drum is used by shamans of several peoples in Siberia.[77][78] The beating of the drum allows the shaman to achieve an altered state of consciousness or to travel on a journey between the physical and spiritual worlds. Much fascination surrounds the role that the acoustics of the drum play to the shaman. Shaman drums are generally constructed of an animal-skin stretched over a bent wooden hoop, with a handle across the hoop.

Roles

 
South Moluccan shaman in an exorcism ritual involving children, Buru, Indonesia (1920)
 
A shaman of the Itneg people in the Philippines renewing an offering to the spirit (anito) of a warrior's shield (kalasag) (1922)[79]

Shamans have been conceptualized as those who are able to gain knowledge and power to heal in the spiritual world or dimension. Most shamans have dreams or visions that convey certain messages. Shamans may claim to have or have acquired many spirit guides, who they believe guide and direct them in their travels in the spirit world. These spirit guides are always thought to be present within the shaman, although others are said to encounter them only when the shaman is in a trance. The spirit guide energizes the shamans, enabling them to enter the spiritual dimension. Shamans claim to heal within the communities and the spiritual dimension by returning lost parts of the human soul from wherever they have gone. Shamans also claim to cleanse excess negative energies, which are said to confuse or pollute the soul. Shamans act as mediators in their cultures.[80][81] Shamans claim to communicate with the spirits on behalf of the community, including the spirits of the deceased. Shamans believe they can communicate with both living and dead to alleviate unrest, unsettled issues, and to deliver gifts to the spirits.

Among the Selkups, the sea duck is a spirit animal. Ducks fly in the air and dive in the water and are thus believed to belong to both the upper world and the world below.[82] Among other Siberian peoples, these characteristics are attributed to waterfowl in general.[83] The upper world is the afterlife primarily associated with deceased humans and is believed to be accessed by soul journeying through a portal in the sky. The lower world or "world below" is the afterlife primarily associated with animals and is believed to be accessed by soul journeying through a portal in the earth.[84] In shamanic cultures, many animals are regarded as spirit animals.

Shamans perform a variety of functions depending upon their respective cultures;[85] healing,[49][86] leading a sacrifice,[87] preserving traditions by storytelling and songs,[88] fortune-telling,[89] and acting as a psychopomp ("guide of souls").[90] A single shaman may fulfill several of these functions.[85]

The functions of a shaman may include either guiding to their proper abode the souls of the dead (which may be guided either one-at-a-time or in a group, depending on the culture), and the curing of ailments. The ailments may be either purely physical afflictions—such as disease, which are claimed to be cured by gifting, flattering, threatening, or wrestling the disease-spirit (sometimes trying all these, sequentially), and which may be completed by displaying a supposedly extracted token of the disease-spirit (displaying this, even if "fraudulent", is supposed to impress the disease-spirit that it has been, or is in the process of being, defeated so that it will retreat and stay out of the patient's body), or else mental (including psychosomatic) afflictions—such as persistent terror, which is likewise believed to be cured by similar methods. In most languages a different term other than the one translated "shaman" is usually applied to a religious official leading sacrificial rites ("priest"), or to a raconteur ("sage") of traditional lore; there may be more of an overlap in functions (with that of a shaman), however, in the case of an interpreter of omens or of dreams.

There are distinct types of shamans who perform more specialized functions. For example, among the Nani people, a distinct kind of shaman acts as a psychopomp.[91] Other specialized shamans may be distinguished according to the type of spirits, or realms of the spirit world, with which the shaman most commonly interacts. These roles vary among the Nenets, Enets, and Selkup shamans.[92][93]

The assistant of an Oroqen shaman (called jardalanin, or "second spirit") knows many things about the associated beliefs. He or she accompanies the rituals and interprets the behaviors of the shaman.[94] Despite these functions, the jardalanin is not a shaman. For this interpretative assistant, it would be unwelcome to fall into a trance.[95]

Ecological aspect

Among the Tucano people, a sophisticated system exists for environmental resources management and for avoiding resource depletion through overhunting. This system is conceptualized mythologically and symbolically by the belief that breaking hunting restrictions may cause illness. As the primary teacher of tribal symbolism, the shaman may have a leading role in this ecological management, actively restricting hunting and fishing. The shaman is able to "release" game animals, or their souls, from their hidden abodes.[96][97] The Piaroa people have ecological concerns related to shamanism.[98] Among the Inuit the angakkuq (shamans) fetch the souls of game from remote places,[99][100] or soul travel to ask for game from mythological beings like the Sea Woman.[101]

Economics

The way shamans get sustenance and take part in everyday life varies across cultures. In many Inuit groups, they provide services for the community and get a "due payment",[who?] and believe the payment is given to the helping spirits.[102] An account states that the gifts and payments that a shaman receives are given by his partner spirit. Since it obliges the shaman to use his gift and to work regularly in this capacity, the spirit rewards him with the goods that it receives.[103] These goods, however, are only "welcome addenda". They are not enough to enable a full-time shaman. Shamans live like any other member of the group, as a hunter or housewife. Due to the popularity of ayahuasca tourism in South America, there are practitioners in areas frequented by backpackers who make a living from leading ceremonies.[104][102]

Academic study

 
Sámi noaidi with his drum

Cognitive and evolutionary approaches

There are two major frameworks among cognitive and evolutionary scientists for explaining shamanism. The first, proposed by anthropologist Michael Winkelman, is known as the "neurotheological theory".[105][106] According to Winkelman, shamanism develops reliably in human societies because it provides valuable benefits to the practitioner, their group, and individual clients. In particular, the trance states induced by dancing, hallucinogens, and other triggers are hypothesized to have an "integrative" effect on cognition, allowing communication among mental systems that specialize in theory of mind, social intelligence, and natural history.[107] With this cognitive integration, the shaman can better predict the movement of animals, resolve group conflicts, plan migrations, and provide other useful services.

The neurotheological theory contrasts with the "by-product" or "subjective" model of shamanism developed by Harvard anthropologist Manvir Singh.[1][108][109] According to Singh, shamanism is a cultural technology that adapts to (or hacks) our psychological biases to convince us that a specialist can influence important but uncontrollable outcomes.[110] Citing work on the psychology of magic and superstition, Singh argues that humans search for ways of influencing uncertain events, such as healing illness, controlling rain, or attracting animals. As specialists compete to help their clients control these outcomes, they drive the evolution of psychologically compelling magic, producing traditions adapted to people's cognitive biases. Shamanism, Singh argues, is the culmination of this cultural evolutionary process—a psychologically appealing method for controlling uncertainty. For example, some shamanic practices exploit our intuitions about humanness: Practitioners use trance and dramatic initiations to seemingly become entities distinct from normal humans and thus more apparently capable of interacting with the invisible forces believed to oversee important outcomes. Influential cognitive and anthropological scientists such as Pascal Boyer and Nicholas Humphrey have endorsed Singh's approach,[111][112] although other researchers have criticized Singh's dismissal of individual- and group-level benefits.[113]

David Lewis-Williams explains the origins of shamanic practice, and some of its precise forms, through aspects of human consciousness evinced in cave art and LSD experiments alike.[114]

Ecological approaches and systems theory

Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff relates these concepts to developments in the ways that modern science (systems theory, ecology, new approaches in anthropology and archeology) treats causality in a less linear fashion.[96] He also suggests a cooperation of modern science and Indigenous lore.[115]

Historical origins

Shamanic practices may originate as early as the Paleolithic, predating all organized religions,[116][117] and certainly as early as the Neolithic period.[117] The earliest known undisputed burial of a shaman (and by extension the earliest undisputed evidence of shamans and shamanic practices) dates back to the early Upper Paleolithic era (c. 30,000 BP) in what is now the Czech Republic.[118]

Sanskrit scholar and comparative mythologist Michael Witzel proposes that all of the world's mythologies, and also the concepts and practices of shamans, can be traced to the migrations of two prehistoric populations: the "Gondwana" type (of circa 65,000 years ago) and the "Laurasian" type (of circa 40,000 years ago).[119]

In November 2008, researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem announced the discovery of a 12,000-year-old site in Israel that is perceived as one of the earliest-known shaman burials. The elderly woman had been arranged on her side, with her legs apart and folded inward at the knee. Ten large stones were placed on the head, pelvis, and arms. Among her unusual grave goods were 50 complete tortoise shells, a human foot, and certain body parts from animals such as a cow tail and eagle wings. Other animal remains came from a boar, leopard, and two martens. "It seems that the woman … was perceived as being in a close relationship with these animal spirits", researchers noted. The grave was one of at least 28 graves at the site, located in a cave in lower Galilee and belonging to the Natufian culture, but is said to be unlike any other among the Epipaleolithic Natufians or in the Paleolithic period.[120]

Semiotic and hermeneutic approaches

A debated etymology of the word "shaman" is "one who knows",[11][121] implying, among other things, that the shaman is an expert in keeping together the multiple codes of the society, and that to be effective, shamans must maintain a comprehensive view in their mind which gives them certainty of knowledge.[10] According to this view, the shaman uses (and the audience understands) multiple codes, expressing meanings in many ways: verbally, musically, artistically, and in dance. Meanings may be manifested in objects such as amulets.[121] If the shaman knows the culture of their community well,[81][122][123] and acts accordingly, their audience will know the used symbols and meanings and therefore trust the shamanic worker.[123][124]

There are also semiotic, theoretical approaches to shamanism,[125][126][127] and examples of "mutually opposing symbols" in academic studies of Siberian lore, distinguishing a "white" shaman who contacts sky spirits for good aims by day, from a "black" shaman who contacts evil spirits for bad aims by night.[128] (Series of such opposing symbols referred to a world-view behind them. Analogously to the way grammar arranges words to express meanings and convey a world, also this formed a cognitive map).[10][129] Shaman's lore is rooted in the folklore of the community, which provides a "mythological mental map".[130][131] Juha Pentikäinen uses the concept "grammar of mind".[131][132]

Armin Geertz coined and introduced the hermeneutics,[133] or "ethnohermeneutics",[129] interpretation. Hoppál extended the term to include not only the interpretation of oral and written texts, but that of "visual texts as well (including motions, gestures and more complex rituals, and ceremonies performed, for instance, by shamans)".[134] Revealing the animistic views in shamanism, but also their relevance to the contemporary world, where ecological problems have validated paradigms of balance and protection.[131]

Decline and revitalization and tradition-preserving movements

Traditional, Indigenous shamanism is believed to be declining around the world. Whalers who frequently interacted with Inuit groups are one source of this decline in that region.[135]

 
A shaman doctor of Kyzyl, 2005. Attempts are being made to preserve and revitalize Tuvan shamanism:[136] former authentic shamans have begun to practice again, and young apprentices are being educated in an organized way.[137]

In many areas, former shamans ceased to fulfill the functions in the community they used to, as they felt mocked by their own community,[138] or regarded their own past as deprecated and were unwilling to talk about it to ethnographers.[139]

Besides personal communications of former shamans, folklore texts may narrate directly about a deterioration process. For example, a Buryat epic text details the wonderful deeds of the ancient "first shaman" Kara-Gürgän:[140] he could even compete with God, create life, steal back the soul of the sick from God without his consent. A subsequent text laments that shamans of older times were stronger, possessing capabilities like omnividence,[141] fortune-telling even for decades in the future, moving as fast as a bullet.[142]

In most affected areas, shamanic practices ceased to exist, with authentic shamans dying and their personal experiences dying with them. The loss of memories is not always lessened by the fact the shaman is not always the only person in a community who knows the beliefs and motives related to the local shaman-hood.[94][95] Although the shaman is often believed and trusted precisely because they "accommodate" to the beliefs of the community,[123] several parts of the knowledge related to the local shamanhood consist of personal experiences of the shaman, or root in their family life,[143] thus, those are lost with their death. Besides that, in many cultures, the entire traditional belief system has become endangered (often together with a partial or total language shift), with the other people of the community remembering the associated beliefs and practices (or the language at all) grew old or died, many folklore memories songs, and texts were forgotten—which may threaten even such peoples who could preserve their isolation until the middle of the 20th century, like the Nganasan.[144]

Some areas could enjoy a prolonged resistance due to their remoteness.

  • Variants of shamanism among Inuit were once a widespread (and very diverse) phenomenon, but today is rarely practiced, as well as already having been in decline among many groups, even while the first major ethnological research was being done,[145] e.g. among Inuit, at the end of the 19th century, Sagloq, the last angakkuq who was believed to be able to travel to the sky and under the sea died—and many other former shamanic capacities were lost during that time as well, like ventriloquism and sleight of hand.[146]
  • The isolated location of Nganasan people allowed shamanism to be a living phenomenon among them even at the beginning of the 20th century,[147] the last notable Nganasan shaman's ceremonies were recorded on film in the 1970s.[148]

After exemplifying the general decline even in the most remote areas, there are revitalizations or tradition-preserving efforts as a response. Besides collecting the memories,[149] there are also tradition-preserving[150] and even revitalization efforts,[151] led by authentic former shamans (for example among the Sakha people[152] and Tuvans).[137]

Native Americans in the United States do not call their traditional spiritual ways "shamanism". However, according to Richard L. Allen, research and policy analyst for the Cherokee Nation, they are regularly overwhelmed with inquiries by and about fraudulent shamans, aka ("plastic medicine people").[153] He adds, "One may assume that anyone claiming to be a Cherokee 'shaman, spiritual healer, or pipe-carrier', is equivalent to a modern day medicine show and snake-oil vendor."[154]

There are also neoshamanistic movements, which usually differ from traditional shamanistic practice and beliefs in significant ways, and often have more connection to the New Age communities than traditional cultures.[155]

Regional variations

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d Singh, Manvir (2018). "The cultural evolution of shamanism". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 41: e66: 1–61. doi:10.1017/S0140525X17001893. PMID 28679454. S2CID 206264885.
  2. ^ Mircea Eliade; Vilmos Diószegi (May 12, 2020). "Shamanism". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 20, 2020. Shamanism, religious phenomenon centred on the shaman, a person believed to achieve various powers through trance or ecstatic religious experience. Although shamans’ repertoires vary from one culture to the next, they are typically thought to have the ability to heal the sick, to communicate with the otherworld, and often to escort the souls of the dead to that otherworld.
  3. ^ Gredig, Florian (2009). Finding New Cosmologies. Berlin: Lit Verlag Dr. W. Hopf.
  4. ^ a b c d Kehoe, Alice Beck (2000). Shamans and religion : an anthropological exploration in critical thinking. Prospect Heights, Ill.: Waveland Press. ISBN 978-1-57766-162-7.
  5. ^ Wernitznig, Dagmar, Europe's Indians, Indians in Europe: European Perceptions and Appropriations of Native American Cultures from Pocahontas to the Present. University Press of America, 2007: p.132. "What happens further in the Plastic Shaman's [fictitious] story is highly irritating from a perspective of cultural hegemony. The Injun elder does not only willingly share their spirituality with the white intruder but, in fact, must come to the conclusion that this intruder is as good an Indian as they are themselves. Regarding Indian spirituality, the Plastic Shaman even out-Indians the actual ones. The messianic element, which Plastic Shamanism financially draws on, is installed in the Yoda-like elder themselves. They are the ones - while melodramatically parting from their spiritual offshoot - who urge the Plastic Shaman to share their gift with the rest of the world. Thus Plastic Shamans wipe their hands clean of any megalomaniac or missionizing undertones. Licensed by the authority of an Indian elder, they now have every right to spread their wisdom, and if they make (quite more than) a buck with it, then so be it.--The neocolonial ideology attached to this scenario leaves less room for cynicism."
  6. ^ Hutton 2001. p. 32.
  7. ^ Hutton, Ronald (2001). Shamans: Siberian Spirituality and the Western Imagination. TPB. OCLC 940167815.
  8. ^ Juha Janhunan, Siberian shamanistic terminology, Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne 1986, 194:97.
  9. ^ Crossley, Pamela Kyle (1996). The Manchus. Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 978-1-55786-560-1.
  10. ^ a b c d e Hoppál 2005: 15
  11. ^ a b Diószegi 1962: 13
  12. ^ Januhnan, 1986: 98.
  13. ^ Eliade, Mircea (1989). Shamanism. Arkana Books. p. 495.
  14. ^ Written before 1676, first printed in 1861; see Hutton 2001. p. vii.
  15. ^ Hutton 2001, p. 32.
  16. ^ Adam Brand, Driejaarige Reize naar China, Amsterdam 1698; transl. A Journal of an Ambassy, London 1698; see Laufer B., "Origin of the Word Shaman," American Anthropologist, 19 (1917): 361–71 and Bremmer J., "Travelling souls? Greek shamanism reconsidered", in Bremmer J.N. (ed.), The Rise and Fall of the Afterlife, London: Routledge, 2002, pp. 7–40. (PDF 2013-12-02 at the Wayback Machine)
  17. ^ Tomaskova, 2013, 76–78, 104–105.
  18. ^ Chadwick, Hector Munro; Chadwick, Nora Kershaw (1968). The Growth of Literature. The University Press. p. 13. The terms shaman and the Russianized feminine form shamanka, 'shamaness', 'seeress', are in general use to denote any persons of the Native professional class among the heathen Siberians and Tatars generally, and there can be no doubt that they have come to be applied to a large number of different classes of people.
  19. ^ Hoppál, Mihály (2005). Sámánok Eurázsiában (in Hungarian). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-05-8295-7. pp. 77, 287; Znamensky, Andrei A. (2005). "Az ősiség szépsége: altáji török sámánok a szibériai regionális gondolkodásban (1860–1920)". In Molnár, Ádám (ed.). Csodaszarvas. Őstörténet, vallás és néphagyomány. Vol. I (in Hungarian). Budapest: Molnár Kiadó. pp. 117–34. ISBN 978-963-218-200-1., p. 128
  20. ^ Hutton 2001. pp. vii–viii.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on January 26, 2013.
  22. ^ a b . Archived from the original on April 2, 2017.
  23. ^ Juha Janhunen, Siberian shamanistic terminology, Suomalais-ugrilaisen Seuran toimituksia/ Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne, 1986, 194: 97–98
  24. ^ Alberts, Thomas (2015). Shamanism, Discourse, Modernity. Farnham: Ashgate. pp. 73–79. ISBN 978-1-4724-3986-4.
  25. ^ "Fatal Naming Rituals". Hazlitt. July 19, 2018. Retrieved March 5, 2020.
  26. ^ a b c Mircea Eliade, Shamanism, Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy, Bollingen Series LXXVI, Princeton University Press 1972, pp. 3–7.
  27. ^ Belcourt, Billy-Ray (July 19, 2018). "Fatal Naming Rituals". Hazlitt. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
  28. ^ a b ISSR, 2001 Summer, abstract online in second half of second paragraph
  29. ^ Hoppál & Szathmári & Takács 2006: 14
  30. ^ Hoppál 1998: 40
  31. ^ Vitebsky 1996: 11
  32. ^ Rydving, Hakan (2011). "Le chamanisme aujourd'hui: constructions et deconstructions d'une illusion scientifique". Études Mongoles et Siberiennes, Centrasiatiques et Tibétaines. 42 (42). doi:10.4000/emscat.1815.
  33. ^ Bumochir, Dulam (2014). "Institutionalization of Mongolian shamanism: from primitivism to civilization". Asian Ethnicity. 15 (4): 473–491. doi:10.1080/14631369.2014.939331. S2CID 145329835.
  34. ^ Hangartner, Judith (2011). The Constitution and Contestation of Darhad Shamans' Power in Contemporary Mongolia. Leiden: Global Oriental. ISBN 978-1-906876-11-1.
  35. ^ Kollmar-Paulenz, Karenina (2012). "The Invention of "Shamanism" in 18th Century Mongolian Elite Discourse". Rocznik Orientalistyczny. LXV (1): 90–106.
  36. ^ "Shamanism | religion". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  37. ^ "Definition of Shamanism". Merriam-Webster.com. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  38. ^ "Using the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Litigation", Reflections on the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Hart Publishing, 2011, doi:10.5040/9781472565358.ch-005, ISBN 978-1-84113-878-7
  39. ^ Oosten, Jarich; Laugrand, Frédéric; Remie, Cornelius (Summer 2006). "Perceptions of Decline: Inuit Shamanism in the Canadian Arctic". Ethnohistory. 53 (3): 445–447. doi:10.1215/00141801-2006-001.
  40. ^ "Mongolia's Lost Secrets in Pictures: The Last Tuvan Shaman". Lonely Planet. August 21, 2014. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  41. ^ Jardine, Bradley; Kupfer, Matthew. "Welcome to the Tuva Republic". The Diplomat. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  42. ^ KING, THOMAS. (2018). INCONVENIENT INDIAN : a curious account of native people in north america. UNIV OF MINNESOTA Press. ISBN 978-1-5179-0446-3. OCLC 1007305354.
  43. ^ Ellingson, Ter (January 16, 2001), "The Ecologically Noble Savage", The Myth of the Noble Savage, University of California Press, pp. 342–358, doi:10.1525/california/9780520222687.003.0023, ISBN 978-0-520-22268-7
  44. ^ a b c Salak, Kira. "Hell and Back". National Geographic Adventure.
  45. ^ Wilbert, Johannes; Vidal, Silvia M. (2004). Whitehead, Neil L.; Wright, Robin (eds.). In Darkness and Secrecy: The Anthropology of Assault Sorcery and Witchcraft in Amazonia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. doi:10.1215/9780822385837. ISBN 978-0-8223-3333-3. S2CID 146752685.
  46. ^ Merkur 1985: 4
  47. ^ Vitebsky 1996: 11–14, 107
  48. ^ Hoppál 2005: 27, 30, 36
  49. ^ a b Sem, Tatyana. "Shamanic Healing Rituals". Russian Museum of Ethnography.
  50. ^ Hoppál 2005: 27
  51. ^ Kleivan & Sonne 1985: 7, 19–21
  52. ^ Gabus, Jean: A karibu eszkimók. Gondolat Kiadó, Budapest, 1970. (Hungarian translation of the original: Vie et coutumes des Esquimaux Caribous, Libraire Payot Lausanne, 1944.) It describes the life of Caribou Eskimo groups.
  53. ^ a b Swancutt, Katherine; Mazard, Mireille (2018). Animism beyond the Soul: Ontology, Reflexivity, and the Making of Anthropological Knowledge. New York: Berghahn Books. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-78533-865-6.
  54. ^ Hoppál 2007c: 18
  55. ^ Hoppál 2005: 99
  56. ^ McCoy, V. R. (March 30, 2018). Shaman-the Dawn's People. BookBaby. ISBN 978-1-7321874-0-5.
  57. ^ Buenaflor, Erika (May 28, 2019). Curanderismo Soul Retrieval: Ancient Shamanic Wisdom to Restore the Sacred Energy of the Soul. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-59143-341-5.
  58. ^ "A Brief History of the San Pedro Cactus". Retrieved June 6, 2015.
  59. ^ Terry, M. (2017). "Lophophora williamsii". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T151962A121515326. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T151962A121515326.en. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
  60. ^ Entheogen, [dictionary.com], retrieved March 13, 2012
  61. ^ Souza, Rafael Sampaio Octaviano de; Albuquerque, Ulysses Paulino de; Monteiro, Júlio Marcelino; Amorim, Elba Lúcia Cavalcanti de (2008). "Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology – Jurema-Preta (Mimosa tenuiflora [Willd.] Poir.): a review of its traditional use, phytochemistry and pharmacology". Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology. 51 (5): 937–947. doi:10.1590/S1516-89132008000500010.
  62. ^ Voss, Richard W.; Prue (2014). "Peyote Religion". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion. Boston, MA: Springer. pp. 1330–33. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-6086-2_506. ISBN 978-1-4614-6085-5.
  63. ^ "Declaran Patrimonio Cultural de la Nación a los conocimientos, saberes y usos del cactus San Pedro". elperuano.pe (in Spanish). November 7, 2022. Retrieved December 10, 2022.
  64. ^ Guzmán, Gastón (2009), "The hallucinogenic mushrooms: diversity, traditions, use and abuse with special reference to the genus Psilocybe", in Misra, J.K.; Deshmukh, S.K. (eds.), Fungi from different environments, Enfield, NH: Science Publishers, pp. 256–77, ISBN 978-1-57808-578-1
  65. ^ Wilbert, Johannes (1987). Tobacco and Shamanism in South America. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-05790-4.
  66. ^ McClain, Matthew Sean (July 29, 2016). Herb & Shaman: Recreating the Cannabis Mythos (PhD). Pacifica Graduate Institute. This study considers the archetypal role of Cannabis in many agricultural rites and shamanic traditions.
  67. ^ Labate, Beatriz Caiuby; Cavnar, Clancy, eds. (2014). Ayahuasca Shamanism in the Amazon and Beyond. Oxford ritual studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-934119-1.
  68. ^ Dalgamo, Phil (June 2007). "Subjective Effects of Salvia Divinorum". Journal of Psychoactive Drugs. 39 (2): 143–49. doi:10.1080/02791072.2007.10399872. PMID 17703708. S2CID 40477640. Mazatec curanderos use Salvia for divinatory rituals and healing ceremonies.
  69. ^ Mahop, Tonye; Uden, Alex; Asaha, Stella; Ndam, Nouhou; Sunderland, Terry (May 2004), "Iboga (Tabernathe iboga)", in Clark, Laurie E.; Sunderland, Terry C.H. (eds.), The Key Non-Timber Forest Products of Central Africa: State of the Knowledge (PDF), Technical Paper no. 22; SD Publication Series, Office of Sustainable Development, Bureau for Africa, U.S. Agency for International Development, p. 166, retrieved January 25, 2018, The use of T. iboga in Gabonese religious ceremonies has been recorded from an early date.
  70. ^ Prayag, Girish; Mura, Paolo; Hall, Michael; Fontaine, Julien (May 2015). "Drug or spirituality seekers? Consuming ayahuasca". Annals of Tourism Research. 52: 175–177. doi:10.1016/j.annals.2015.03.008. ISSN 0160-7383.
  71. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 2, 2015. Retrieved June 6, 2015.
  72. ^ a b Nattiez: 5
  73. ^ "Inuit Throat-Singing". Retrieved June 6, 2015.
  74. ^ Turner et al., p. 440
  75. ^ Noll & Shi 2004 (avail. )
  76. ^ Halifax, Joan (1982). Shaman: The Wounded Healer. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-81029-3. OCLC 8800269.
  77. ^ Barüske 1969: 24, 50–51
  78. ^ Kleivan & Sonne 1985: 25
  79. ^ Fay-Cooper Cole & Albert Gale (1922). "The Tinguian; Social, Religious, and Economic life of a Philippine tribe". Field Museum of Natural History: Anthropological Series. 14 (2): 235–493.
  80. ^ Hoppál 2005: 45
  81. ^ a b Boglár 2001: 24
  82. ^ Hoppál 2005: 94
  83. ^ Vitebsky 1996: 46
  84. ^ Ingerman, Sandra (2004). Shamanic Journeying: A Beginner's Guide. Sounds True. ISBN 978-1-59179-943-6.
  85. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 25
  86. ^ Hoppál 2005: 27–28
  87. ^ Hoppál 2005: 28–33
  88. ^ Hoppál 2005: 37
  89. ^ Hoppál 2005: 34–35
  90. ^ Hoppál 2005: 36
  91. ^ Hoppál 2005: 61–64
  92. ^ Hoppál 2005: 87–95
  93. ^ "Shamanism in Siberia: Part III. Religion: Chapter IX. Types of Shamans". Retrieved June 6, 2015.
  94. ^ a b Noll & Shi 2004: 10, footnote 10 (see )
  95. ^ a b Noll & Shi 2004: 8–9 (see )
  96. ^ a b Reichel-Dolmatoff 1997
  97. ^ Vitebsky 1996: 107
  98. ^ Boglár 2001: 26
  99. ^ Merkur 1985: 5
  100. ^ Vitebsky 1996: 108
  101. ^ Kleivan & Sonne: 27–28
  102. ^ a b Merkur 1985: 3
  103. ^ Oelschlaegel, Anett C. (2016). Plural World Interpretations. Berlin: LIT Verlag Münster. p. 206. ISBN 978-3-643-90788-2.
  104. ^ Kleivan & Sonne 1985: 24
  105. ^ Winkelman, Michael (2000). Shamanism : the neural ecology of consciousness and healing. Bergin & Garvey. ISBN 978-0-89789-704-4. OCLC 1026223037.
  106. ^ Winkelman, Michael. "Shamanism and cognitive evolution". Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 12 (1): 71–101. doi:10.1017/S0959774302000045. S2CID 162355879.
  107. ^ Winkelman, Michael (1986). "Trance states: A theoretical model and cross-cultural analysis". Ethos. 14 (2): 174–203. doi:10.1525/eth.1986.14.2.02a00040.
  108. ^ Reuell, Peter (2018). "The mystery of the medicine man". Harvard Gazette.
  109. ^ Singh, Manvir (2018). "Why is there shamanism? Developing the cultural evolutionary theory and addressing alternative accounts". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 41: e92. doi:10.1017/S0140525X17002230. PMID 31064458. S2CID 147706275.
  110. ^ Singh, Manvir. "Modern shamans: Financial managers, political pundits and others who help tame life's uncertainty". The Conversation. Retrieved May 2, 2019.
  111. ^ Boyer, Pascal (2018). "Missing links: The psychology and epidemiology of shamanistic beliefs". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 41: e71. doi:10.1017/S0140525X17002023. PMID 31064451. S2CID 147706563.
  112. ^ Humphrey, Nicholas (2018). "Shamans as healers: When magical structure becomes practical function". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 41: e77. doi:10.1017/S0140525X17002084. PMID 31064454. S2CID 147706046.
  113. ^ Watson-Jones, Rachel E.; Legare (2018). "The social functions of shamanism". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 41: e88. doi:10.1017/S0140525X17002199. PMID 31064460. S2CID 147706978.
  114. ^ David Lewis-Williams, The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art (London: Thames and Hudson, 2002)
  115. ^ Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff: . The Ecologist, Vol. 29 No. 4, July 1999.
  116. ^ Jean Clottes. . Bradshaw foundation. Archived from the original on April 30, 2008. Retrieved March 11, 2008.
  117. ^ a b Karl J. Narr. . Britannica online encyclopedia 2008. Archived from the original on April 9, 2008. Retrieved March 28, 2008.
  118. ^ Tedlock, Barbara. 2005. The Woman in the Shaman's Body: Reclaiming the Feminine in Religion and Medicine. New York: Bantam
  119. ^ Witzel, 2011.
  120. ^ "Earliest known shaman grave site found: study", reported by Reuters via Yahoo! News, November 4, 2008, archived. see Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
  121. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 14
  122. ^ Pentikäinen 1995: 270
  123. ^ a b c Hoppál 2005: 25–26,43
  124. ^ Hoppál 2004: 14
  125. ^ Hoppál 2005: 13–15, 58, 197
  126. ^ Hoppál 2006a: 11
  127. ^ Hoppál 2006b: 175
  128. ^ Hoppál 2007c: 24–25
  129. ^ a b Hoppál, Mihály: Nature worship in Siberian shamanism
  130. ^ Hoppál 2007b: 12–13
  131. ^ a b c Hoppál 2007c: 25
  132. ^ Pentikäinen 1995: 270–71
  133. ^ Merkur 1985: v
  134. ^ Hoppál 2007b: 13
  135. ^ Oosten, Jarich; Laugrand, Frederic; Remie, Cornelius (2006). "Perceptions of Decline: Inuit Shamanism in the Canadian Arctic". American Society for Ethnohistory. 53 (3): 445–77. doi:10.1215/00141801-2006-001.
  136. ^ Hoppál 2005: 117
  137. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 259
  138. ^ Boglár 2001: 19–20
  139. ^ Diószegi 1960: 37–39
  140. ^ Eliade 2001: 76 (Chpt 3 about obtaining shamanic capabilities)
  141. ^ Omnividence: A word created by Edwin A. Abbott in his book titled Flatland
  142. ^ Diószegi 1960: 88–89
  143. ^ Hoppál 2005: 224
  144. ^ Nagy 1998: 232
  145. ^ Merkur 1985: 132
  146. ^ Merkur 1985: 134
  147. ^ Hoppál 2005: 92
  148. ^ Hoppál 1994: 62
  149. ^ Hoppál 2005: 88
  150. ^ Hoppál 2005: 93
  151. ^ Hoppál 2005: 111, 117–19, 128, 132, 133–34, 252–63
  152. ^ Hoppál 2005: 257–58
  153. ^ Hagan, Helene E. "The Plastic Medicine People Circle." 2013-03-05 at the Wayback Machine Sonoma Free County Press. Accessed 31 Jan 2013.
  154. ^ "Pseudo Shamans Cherokee Statement". Retrieved June 23, 2008.
  155. ^ Vitebsky 1996: 150–53

Sources

  • Barüske, Heinz (1969). Eskimo Märchen. Die Märchen der Weltliteratur (in German). Düsseldorf • Köln: Eugen Diederichs Verlag. The title means: "Eskimo tales", the series means: "The tales of world literature".
  • Boglár, Lajos (2001). A kultúra arcai. Mozaikok a kulturális antropológia köreiből. TÁRStudomány (in Hungarian). Budapest: Napvilág Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-9082-94-6. The title means "The faces of culture. Mosaics from the area of cultural anthropology".
  • Czaplicka, M.A. (1914). "Types of shaman". Shamanism in Siberia. Aboriginal Siberia. A study in social anthropology. preface by Marett, R.R. Somerville College, University of Oxford; Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-1-60506-060-6.
  • Deschênes, Bruno (2002). "Inuit Throat-Singing". Musical Traditions. The Magazine for Traditional Music Throughout the World.
  • Diószegi, Vilmos (1968). Tracing shamans in Siberia. The story of an ethnographical research expedition. Translated by Anita Rajkay Babó (from Hungarian). Oosterhout: Anthropological Publications.
  • Diószegi, Vilmos (1962). Samanizmus. Élet és Tudomány Kiskönyvtár (in Hungarian). Budapest: Gondolat. ISBN 978-963-9147-13-3. The title means: "Shamanism".
  • Diószegi, Vilmos (1998) [1958]. A sámánhit emlékei a magyar népi műveltségben (in Hungarian) (1st reprint ed.). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-05-7542-3. The title means: "Remnants of shamanistic beliefs in Hungarian folklore".
  • Fienup-Riordan, Ann (1994). Boundaries and Passages: Rule and Ritual in Yup'ik Eskimo Oral Tradition. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-585-12190-1.
  • Fock, Niels (1963). Waiwai. Religion and society of an Amazonian tribe. Nationalmuseets skrifter, Etnografisk Række (Ethnographical series), VIII. Copenhagen: The National Museum of Denmark.
  • Freuchen, Peter (1961). Book of the Eskimos. Cleveland • New York: The World Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-449-30802-8.
  • Hajdú, Péter (1975). "A rokonság nyelvi háttere". In Hajdú, Péter (ed.). Uráli népek. Nyelvrokonaink kultúrája és hagyományai (in Hungarian). Budapest: Corvina Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-13-0900-3. The title means: "Uralic peoples. Culture and traditions of our linguistic relatives"; the chapter means "Linguistical background of the relationship".
  • Hoppál, Mihály (1994). Sámánok, lelkek és jelképek (in Hungarian). Budapest: Helikon Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-208-298-1. The title means "Shamans, souls and symbols".
  • Hoppál, Mihály (1998). "A honfoglalók hitvilága és a magyar samanizmus". Folklór és közösség (in Hungarian). Budapest: Széphalom Könyvműhely. pp. 40–45. ISBN 978-963-9028-14-2. The title means "The belief system of Hungarians when they entered the Pannonian Basin, and their shamanism".
  • Hoppál, Mihály (2005). Sámánok Eurázsiában (in Hungarian). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-05-8295-7. The title means "Shamans in Eurasia", the book is published also in German, Estonian and Finnish. Site of publisher with short description on the book (in Hungarian) 2010-01-02 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Hoppál, Mihály (2006a). "Sámánok, kultúrák és kutatók az ezredfordulón". In Hoppál, Mihály; Szathmári, Botond; Takács, András (eds.). Sámánok és kultúrák. Budapest: Gondolat. pp. 9–25. ISBN 978-963-9450-28-8. The chapter title means "Shamans, cultures and researchers in the millenary", the book title means "Shamans and cultures".
  • Hoppál, Mihály (2007b). "Is Shamanism a Folk Religion?". Shamans and Traditions (Vol. 13). Bibliotheca Shamanistica. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. pp. 11–16. ISBN 978-963-05-8521-7.
  • Hoppál, Mihály (2007c). "Eco-Animism of Siberian Shamanhood". Shamans and Traditions (Vol 13). Bibliotheca Shamanistica. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. pp. 17–26. ISBN 978-963-05-8521-7.
  • Janhunen, Juha. Siberian shamanistic terminology. Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne, 1986, 194: 97–117.
  • Hugh-Jones, Christine (1980). From the Milk River: Spatial and Temporal Processes in Northwest Amazonia. Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-22544-1.
  • Hugh-Jones, Stephen (1980). The Palm and the Pleiades. Initiation and Cosmology in Northwest Amazonia. Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-21952-5.
  • Kleivan, Inge; B. Sonne (1985). Eskimos: Greenland and Canada. Iconography of religions, section VIII, "Arctic Peoples", fascicle 2. Leiden, The Netherlands: Institute of Religious Iconography • State University Groningen. E.J. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-07160-5.
  • Menovščikov, G.A. (= Г. А. Меновщиков) (1968). "Popular Conceptions, Religious Beliefs and Rites of the Asiatic Eskimoes". In Diószegi, Vilmos (ed.). Popular beliefs and folklore tradition in Siberia. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó.
  • Nagy, Beáta Boglárka (1998). "Az északi szamojédok". In Csepregi, Márta (ed.). Finnugor kalauz. Panoráma (in Hungarian). Budapest: Medicina Könyvkiadó. pp. 221–34. ISBN 978-963-243-813-9. The chapter means "Northern Samoyedic peoples", the title means Finno-Ugric guide.
  • Nattiez, Jean Jacques. Inuit Games and Songs / Chants et Jeux des Inuit. Musiques & musiciens du monde / Musics & musicians of the world. Montreal: Research Group in Musical Semiotics, Faculty of Music, University of Montreal.. The songs are available online, on the ethnopoetics website curated by Jerome Rothenberg.
  • Noll, Richard; Shi, Kun (2004). (PDF). 韓國宗敎硏究 (Journal of Korean Religions). Vol. 6. Seoul KR: 西江大學校. 宗教硏究所 (Sŏgang Taehakkyo. Chonggyo Yŏnʾguso.). pp. 135–62. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved May 28, 2020.. It describes the life of Chuonnasuan, the last shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China.
  • Reinhard, Johan (1976) "Shamanism and Spirit Possession: The Definition Problem." In Spirit Possession in the Nepal Himalayas, J. Hitchcock & R. Jones (eds.), New Delhi: Vikas Publishing House, pp. 12–20.
  • Shimamura, Ippei The roots Seekers: Shamanism and Ethnicity Among the Mongol Buryats. Yokohama, Japan: Shumpusha, 2014.
  • Singh, Manvir (2018). "The cultural evolution of shamanism". Behavioral & Brain Sciences. 41: e66, 1–61. doi:10.1017/S0140525X17001893. PMID 28679454. S2CID 206264885. Summary of the cultural evolutionary and cognitive foundations of shamanism; published with commentaries by 25 scholars (including anthropologists, philosophers, and psychologists).
  • Turner, Robert P.; Lukoff, David; Barnhouse, Ruth Tiffany & Lu, Francis G. (1995) Religious or Spiritual Problem. A Culturally Sensitive Diagnostic Category in the DSM-IV. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, Vol.183, No. 7, pp. 435–44
  • Voigt, Miklós (2000). "Sámán – a szó és értelme". Világnak kezdetétől fogva. Történeti folklorisztikai tanulmányok (in Hungarian). Budapest: Universitas Könyvkiadó. pp. 41–45. ISBN 978-963-9104-39-6. The chapter discusses the etymology and meaning of word "shaman".
  • Winkelman, Michael (2000). Shamanism: The neural ecology of consciousness and healing. Westport, CT: Bergen & Gavey. ISBN 978-963-9104-39-6. Major work on the evolutionary and psychological origins of shamanism.
  • Witzel, Michael (2011). "Shamanism in Northern and Southern Eurasia: their distinctive methods and change of consciousness" (PDF). Social Science Information. 50 (1): 39–61. doi:10.1177/0539018410391044. S2CID 144745844.

Further reading

  • Joseph Campbell, The Masks of God: Primitive Mythology. 1959; reprint, New York and London: Penguin Books, 1976. ISBN 978-0-14-019443-2
  • Harner, Michael, The Way of the Shaman: A Guide to Power and Healing, Harper & Row Publishers, NY 1980
  • Richard de Mille, ed. The Don Juan Papers: Further Castaneda Controversies. Santa Barbara, California: Ross-Erikson, 1980.
  • George Devereux, "Shamans as Neurotics", American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 63, No. 5, Part 1. (Oct. 1961), pp. 1088–90.
  • Jay Courtney Fikes, Carlos Castaneda: Academic Opportunism and the Psychedelic Sixties, Millennia Press, Canada, 1993 ISBN 978-0-9696960-0-1
  • Åke Hultkrantz (Honorary Editor in Chief): Shaman. Journal of the International Society for Shamanistic Research
  • Philip Jenkins, Dream Catchers: How Mainstream America Discovered Native Spirituality. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0-19-516115-1
  • Alice Kehoe, Shamans and Religion: An Anthropological Exploration in Critical Thinking. 2000. London: Waveland Press. ISBN 978-1-57766-162-7
  • David Charles Manners, In the Shadow of Crows. (contains first-hand accounts of the Nepalese jhankri tradition) Oxford: Signal Books, 2011. ISBN 978-1-904955-92-4.
  • Jordan D. Paper, The Spirits are Drunk: Comparative Approaches to Chinese Religion, Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0-7914-2315-8.
  • Smith, Frederick M. (2006). The Self Possessed: Deity and Spirit Possession in South Asian Literature. Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-13748-5. pp. 195–202.
  • Barbara Tedlock, Time and the Highland Maya, U. of New Mexico Press, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8263-1358-4
  • Silvia Tomášková, Wayward Shamans: the prehistory of an idea, University of California Press, 2013. ISBN 978-0-520-27532-4
  • Michel Weber, « Shamanism and proto-consciousness », in René Lebrun, Julien De Vos et É. Van Quickelberghe (éds), Deus Unicus. Actes du colloque « Aux origines du monothéisme et du scepticisme religieux » organisé à Louvain-la-Neuve les 7 et 8 juin 2013 par le Centre d'histoire des Religions Cardinal Julien Ries [Cardinalis Julien Ries et Pierre Bordreuil in memoriam], Turnhout, Brepols, coll. Homo Religiosus série II, 14, 2015, pp. 247–60.
  • Andrei Znamenski, Shamanism in Siberia: Russian Records of Siberian Spirituality. Dordrech and Boston: Kluwer/Springer, 2003. ISBN 978-1-4020-1740-7
  • Andrei Znamenski,The Beauty of the Primitive: Shamanism and Western Imagination. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-1951-7231-7

External links

  • A charitable organization protecting traditional cultures in northern Thailand
  • (Meng Jin Fu), The Last Shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China, by Richard Noll and Kun Shi (Internet Archive copy from
  • New Age Frauds and Plastic Shamans, an organization devoted to alerting seekers about fraudulent teachers, and helping them avoid being exploited or participating in exploitation
  • Shamanic Healing Rituals by Tatyana Sem, Russian Museum of Ethnography
  • Shamanism and the Image of the Teutonic Deity, Óðinn by A. Asbjorn Jon
  • Shamanism in Siberia – photographs by Standa Krupar
  • Studies in Siberian Shamanism and Religions of the Finno-Ugrian Peoples by Aado Lintrop, Folk Belief and Media Group of the Estonian Literary Museum
  • by Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff Amazonian Indigenous peoples and ecology
  • Samgaldai NGO – A charitable, non-for-profit NGO for preserving Mongolian traditional Shamanic practices and rituals, operating in Mongolia.

shamanism, shaman, shamans, redirect, here, other, uses, shaman, disambiguation, religious, practice, that, involves, practitioner, shaman, interacting, with, what, they, believe, spirit, world, through, altered, states, consciousness, such, trance, goal, this. Shaman and Shamans redirect here For other uses see Shaman disambiguation Shamanism is a religious practice that involves a practitioner shaman interacting with what they believe to be a spirit world through altered states of consciousness such as trance 1 2 The goal of this is usually to direct spirits or spiritual energies into the physical world for the purpose of healing divination or to aid human beings in some other way 1 Beliefs and practices categorized as shamanic have attracted the interest of scholars from a variety of disciplines including anthropologists archeologists historians religious studies scholars philosophers and psychologists Hundreds of books and academic papers on the subject have been produced with a peer reviewed academic journal being devoted to the study of shamanism In the 20th century non Indigenous Westerners involved in countercultural movements such as hippies and the New Age created modern magicoreligious practices influenced by their ideas of various Indigenous religions creating what has been termed neoshamanism or the neoshamanic movement 3 It has affected the development of many neopagan practices as well as faced a backlash and accusations of cultural appropriation 4 exploitation and misrepresentation when outside observers have tried to practice the ceremonies of or represent centuries old cultures to which they do not belong 5 Contents 1 Terminology 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Definitions 1 3 Criticism of the term 2 History 3 Beliefs 3 1 Soul and spirit concepts 4 Practice 4 1 Entheogens 4 2 Music and songs 4 3 Initiation and learning 4 4 Other practices 4 5 Items used in spiritual practice 5 Roles 6 Ecological aspect 7 Economics 8 Academic study 8 1 Cognitive and evolutionary approaches 8 2 Ecological approaches and systems theory 8 3 Historical origins 8 4 Semiotic and hermeneutic approaches 9 Decline and revitalization and tradition preserving movements 10 Regional variations 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksTerminology EditEtymology Edit The earliest known depiction of a Siberian shaman by the Dutch Nicolaes Witsen 17th century Witsen called him a priest of the Devil and drew clawed feet for the supposed demonic qualities 6 The Modern English word shamanism derives from the Russian word saman which itself comes from the word saman from a Tungusic language 7 possibly from the southwestern dialect of the Evenki spoken by the Sym Evenki peoples 8 or from the Manchu language 9 The etymology of the word is sometimes connected to the Tungus root sa meaning to know 10 11 However Finnish ethnolinguist Juha Janhunen questions this connection on linguistic grounds The possibility cannot be completely rejected but neither should it be accepted without reservation since the assumed derivational relationship is phonologically irregular note especially the vowel quantities 12 Mircea Eliade noted that the Sanskrit word sramaṇa designating a wandering monastic or holy figure has spread to many Central Asian languages along with Buddhism and could be the ultimate origin of the word shaman 13 The term was adopted by Russians interacting with the Indigenous peoples in Siberia It is found in the memoirs of the exiled Russian churchman Avvakum 14 It was brought to Western Europe twenty years later by the Dutch traveler Nicolaes Witsen who reported his stay and journeys among the Tungusic and Samoyedic speaking Indigenous peoples of Siberia in his book Noord en Oost Tataryen 1692 15 Adam Brand a merchant from Lubeck published in 1698 his account of a Russian embassy to China a translation of his book published the same year introduced the word shaman to English speakers 16 Anthropologist and archeologist Silvia Tomaskova argued that by the mid 1600s many Europeans applied the Arabic term shaitan meaning devil to the non Christian practices and beliefs of Indigenous peoples beyond the Ural Mountains 17 She suggests that shaman may have entered the various Tungus dialects as a corruption of this term and then been told to Christian missionaries explorers soldiers and colonial administrators with whom the people had increasing contact for centuries A female shaman is sometimes called a shamanka which is not an actual Tungus term but simply shaman plus the Russian suffix ka for feminine nouns 18 Definitions Edit A shaman probably Khakas Russian Empire 1908 19 There is no single agreed upon definition for the word shamanism among anthropologists Thomas Downson suggests three shared elements of shamanism practitioners consistently alter consciousness the community regards altering consciousness as an important ritual practice and the knowledge about the practice is controlled The English historian Ronald Hutton noted that by the dawn of the 21st century there were four separate definitions of the term which appeared to be in use The first of these uses the term to refer to anybody who contacts a spirit world while in an altered state of consciousness The second definition limits the term to refer to those who contact a spirit world while in an altered state of consciousness at the behest of others The third definition attempts to distinguish shamans from other magicoreligious specialists who are believed to contact spirits such as mediums witch doctors spiritual healers or prophets by claiming that shamans undertake some particular technique not used by the others Problematically scholars advocating the third view have failed to agree on what the defining technique should be The fourth definition identified by Hutton uses shamanism to refer to the Indigenous religions of Siberia and neighboring parts of Asia 20 According to the Golomt Center for Shamanic Studies a Mongolian organization of shamans the Evenk word shaman would more accurately be translated as priest 21 According to the Oxford English Dictionary a shaman ˈ ʃ ɑː m e n SHAH men ˈ ʃ ae m e n or ˈ ʃ eɪ m e n 22 is someone who is regarded as having access to and influence in the world of benevolent and malevolent spirits who typically enters into a trance state during a ritual and practices divination and healing 1 22 The word shaman probably originates from the Tungusic Evenki language of North Asia According to Juha Janhunen the word is attested in all of the Tungusic idioms such as Negidal Lamut Udehe Orochi Nanai Ilcha Orok Manchu and Ulcha and nothing seems to contradict the assumption that the meaning shaman also derives from Proto Tungusic and may have roots that extend back in time at least two millennia 23 The term was introduced to the west after Russian forces conquered the shamanistic Khanate of Kazan in 1552 The term shamanism was first applied by Western anthropologists as outside observers of the ancient religion of the Turks and Mongols as well as those of the neighbouring Tungusic and Samoyedic speaking peoples Upon observing more religious traditions around the world some Western anthropologists began to also use the term in a very broad sense The term was used to describe unrelated magicoreligious practices found within the ethnic religions of other parts of Asia Africa Australasia and even completely unrelated parts of the Americas as they believed these practices to be similar to one another 24 While the term has been incorrectly applied by cultural outsiders to many Indigenous spiritual practices the words shaman and shamanism do not accurately describe the variety and complexity that is Indigenous spirituality Each nation and tribe has its own way of life and uses terms in their own languages 25 Mircea Eliade writes A first definition of this complex phenomenon and perhaps the least hazardous will be shamanism technique of religious ecstasy 26 Shamanism encompasses the premise that shamans are intermediaries or messengers between the human world and the spirit worlds Shamans are said to treat ailments and illnesses by mending the soul Alleviating traumas affecting the soul or spirit are believed to restore the physical body of the individual to balance and wholeness Shamans also claim to enter supernatural realms or dimensions to obtain solutions to problems afflicting the community Shamans claim to visit other worlds or dimensions to bring guidance to misguided souls and to ameliorate illnesses of the human soul caused by foreign elements Shamans operate primarily within the spiritual world which they believe in turn affects the human world The restoration of balance is said to result in the elimination of the ailment 26 Criticism of the term Edit Further information Medicine man A tableau presenting figures of various cultures filling in mediator like roles often being termed as shaman in the literature The tableau presents the diversity of this concept The anthropologist Alice Kehoe criticizes the term shaman in her book Shamans and Religion An Anthropological Exploration in Critical Thinking Part of this criticism involves the notion of cultural appropriation 4 This includes criticism of New Age and modern Western forms of shamanism which according to Kehoe misrepresent or dilute Indigenous practices Kehoe also believes that the term reinforces racist ideas such as the noble savage Kehoe is highly critical of Mircea Eliade s work on shamanism as an invention synthesized from various sources unsupported by more direct research To Kehoe citing that ritualistic practices most notably drumming trance chanting entheogens and hallucinogens spirit communication and healing as being definitive of shamanism is poor practice Such citations ignore the fact that those practices exist outside of what is defined as shamanism and play similar roles even in nonshamanic cultures such as the role of chanting in rituals in Abrahamic religions and that in their expression are unique to each culture that uses them Such practices cannot be generalized easily accurately or usefully into a global religion of shamanism Because of this Kehoe is also highly critical of the hypothesis that shamanism is an ancient unchanged and surviving religion from the Paleolithic period 4 The term has been criticized by whom for its perceived colonial roots and as a tool to perpetuate perceived contemporary linguistic colonialism By Western scholars the term shamanism is used to refer to a variety of different cultures and practices around the world which can vary dramatically and may not be accurately represented by a single concept Billy Ray Belcourt an author and award winning scholar from the Driftpile Cree Nation in Canada argues that using language with the intention of simplifying culture that is diverse such as Shamanism as it is prevalent in communities around the world and is made up of many complex components works to conceal the complexities of the social and political violence that Indigenous communities have experienced at the hands of settlers 27 Belcourt argues that language used to imply simplicity in regards to Indigenous culture is a tool used to belittle Indigenous cultures as it views Indigenous communities solely as a result of a history embroiled in violence that leaves Indigenous communities only capable of simplicity and plainness Anthropologist Mihaly Hoppal also discusses whether the term shamanism is appropriate He notes that for many readers ism implies a particular dogma like Buddhism or Judaism He recommends using the term shamanhood 28 or shamanship 29 a term used in old Russian and German ethnographic reports at the beginning of the 20th century for stressing the diversity and the specific features of the discussed cultures He believes that this places more stress on the local variations 10 and emphasizes that shamanism is not a religion of sacred dogmas but linked to the everyday life in a practical way 30 Following similar thoughts he also conjectures a contemporary paradigm shift 28 Piers Vitebsky also mentions that despite really astonishing similarities there is no unity in shamanism The various fragmented shamanistic practices and beliefs coexist with other beliefs everywhere There is no record of pure shamanistic societies although their existence is not impossible 31 Norwegian social anthropologist Hakan Rydving has likewise argued for the abandonment of the terms shaman and shamanism as scientific illusions 32 Dulam Bumochir has affirmed the above critiques of shamanism as a Western construct created for comparative purposes and in an extensive article has documented the role of Mongols themselves particularly the partnership of scholars and shamans in the reconstruction of shamanism in post 1990 post communist Mongolia 33 This process has also been documented by Swiss anthropologist Judith Hangartner in her landmark study of Darhad shamans in Mongolia 34 Historian Karena Kollmar Polenz argues that the social construction and reification of shamanism as a religious other actually began with the 18th century writings of Tibetan Buddhist monks in Mongolia and later probably influenced the formation of European discourse on Shamanism 35 History EditShamanism is a system of religious practice 36 Historically it is often associated with Indigenous and tribal societies and involves belief that shamans with a connection to the otherworld have the power to heal the sick communicate with spirits and escort souls of the dead to the afterlife The origins of Shamanism stem from indigenous peoples of far northern Europe and Siberia 37 Despite structural implications of colonialism and imperialism that have limited the ability of Indigenous peoples to practice traditional spiritualities many communities are undergoing resurgence through self determination 38 and the reclamation of dynamic traditions 39 Other groups have been able to avoid some of these structural impediments by virtue of their isolation such as the nomadic Tuvan with an estimated population of 3000 people surviving from this tribe 40 Tuva is one of the most isolated Asiatic tribes in Russia where the art of shamanism has been preserved until today due to its isolated existence allowing it to be free from the influences of other major religions 41 Beliefs EditThere are many variations of shamanism throughout the world but several common beliefs are shared by all forms of shamanism Common beliefs identified by Eliade 1972 26 are the following Spirits exist and they play important roles both in individual lives and in human society The shaman can communicate with the spirit world Spirits can be benevolent or malevolent The shaman can treat sickness caused by malevolent spirits The shaman can employ trances inducing techniques to incite visionary ecstasy and go on vision quests The shaman s spirit can leave the body to enter the supernatural world to search for answers The shaman evokes animal images as spirit guides omens and message bearers The shaman can perform other varied forms of divination scry throw bones or runes and sometimes foretell of future eventsAs Alice Kehoe 4 notes Eliade s conceptualization of shamans produces a universalist image of Indigenous cultures which perpetuates notions of the dead or dying Indian 42 as well as the noble savage 43 Shamanism is based on the premise that the visible world is pervaded by invisible forces or spirits which affect the lives of the living 44 Although the causes of disease lie in the spiritual realm inspired by malicious spirits both spiritual and physical methods are used to heal Commonly a shaman enters the body of the patient to confront the spiritual infirmity and heals by banishing the infectious spirit Many shamans have expert knowledge of medicinal plants native to their area and an herbal treatment is often prescribed In many places shamans learn directly from the plants harnessing their effects and healing properties after obtaining permission from the indwelling or patron spirits In the Peruvian Amazon Basin shamans and curanderos use medicine songs called icaros to evoke spirits Before a spirit can be summoned it must teach the shaman its song 44 The use of totemic items such as rocks with special powers and an animating spirit is common Such practices are presumably very ancient Plato wrote in his Phaedrus that the first prophecies were the words of an oak and that those who lived at that time found it rewarding enough to listen to an oak or a stone so long as it was telling the truth Belief in witchcraft and sorcery known as brujeria in Latin America exists in many societies Other societies assert all shamans have the power to both cure and kill Those with shamanic knowledge usually enjoy great power and prestige in the community but they may also be regarded suspiciously or fearfully as potentially harmful to others 45 By engaging in their work a shaman is exposed to significant personal risk as shamanic plant materials can be toxic or fatal if misused Spells are commonly used in an attempt to protect against these dangers and the use of more dangerous plants is often very highly ritualized Soul and spirit concepts Edit See also Soul dualism Soul Soul can generally explain more seemingly unassociated phenomena in shamanism 46 47 48 Healing Healing may be based closely on the soul concepts of the belief system of the people served by the shaman 49 It may consist of the supposed retrieving the lost soul of the ill person 50 Scarcity of hunted game Scarcity of hunted game can be solved by releasing the souls of the animals from their hidden abodes Besides that many taboos may prescribe the behavior of people towards game so that the souls of the animals do not feel angry or hurt or the pleased soul of the already killed prey can tell the other still living animals that they can allow themselves to be caught and killed 51 52 Infertility of women Infertility of women is thought to be cured by obtaining the soul of the expected child citation needed Spirits Spirits are invisible entities that only shamans can see They are seen as persons that can assume a human or animal body 53 Some animals in their physical forms are also seen as spirits such as the case of the eagle snake jaguar and rat 53 Beliefs related to spirits can explain many different phenomena 54 For example the importance of storytelling or acting as a singer can be understood better if the whole belief system is examined A person who can memorize long texts or songs and play an instrument may be regarded as the beneficiary of contact with the spirits e g Khanty people 55 Practice EditSee also Religious ecstasy Generally shamans traverse the axis mundi and enter the spirit world by effecting a transition of consciousness entering into an ecstatic trance either autohypnotically or through the use of entheogens or ritual performances 56 57 The methods employed are diverse and are often used together Entheogens Edit Flowering San Pedro an entheogenic cactus that has been used for over 3 000 years 58 Today the vast majority of extracted mescaline is from columnar cacti not vulnerable peyote 59 An entheogen generating the divine within 60 is a psychoactive substance used in a religious shamanic or spiritual context 61 Entheogens have been used in a ritualized context in a number of different cultures possibly for thousands of years Examples of substances used by some cultures as entheogens include peyote 62 Echinopsis pachanoi 63 psilocybin and Amanita muscaria fly agaric mushrooms 64 uncured tobacco 65 cannabis 66 ayahuasca 67 Salvia divinorum 68 and iboga 69 Entheogens also have a substantial history of commodification especially in the realm of spiritual tourism For instance countries such as Brazil and Peru have faced an influx of tourists since the psychedelic era beginning in the late 1960s initiating what has been termed ayahuasca tourism 70 Music and songs Edit See also Shamanic music and Imitation of sounds in shamanism Just like shamanism itself 10 music and songs related to it in various cultures are diverse In several instances songs related to shamanism are intended to imitate natural sounds via onomatopoeia 71 Sound mimesis in various cultures may serve other functions not necessarily related to shamanism practical goals such as luring game in the hunt 72 or entertainment Inuit throat singing 72 73 Initiation and learning Edit Shamans often claim to have been called through dreams or signs However some say their powers are inherited In traditional societies shamanic training varies in length but generally takes years Turner and colleagues 74 mention a phenomenon called shamanistic initiatory crisis a rite of passage for shamans to be commonly involving physical illness or psychological crisis The significant role of initiatory illnesses in the calling of a shaman can be found in the case history of Chuonnasuan who was one of the last shamans among the Tungus peoples in Northeast China 75 The wounded healer is an archetype for a shamanic trial and journey This process is important to young shamans They undergo a type of sickness that pushes them to the brink of death This is said to happen for two reasons The shaman crosses over to the underworld This happens so the shaman can venture to its depths to bring back vital information for the sick and the tribe The shaman must become sick to understand sickness When the shaman overcomes their own sickness they believe that they will hold the cure to heal all that suffer 76 Other practices Edit Ecstatic dancing Icaros medicine songs 44 Vigils Fasting Mariri Ayahuasca ceremoniesItems used in spiritual practice Edit Shamans may employ varying materials in spiritual practice in different cultures Goldes shaman priest in his regalia Drums The drum is used by shamans of several peoples in Siberia 77 78 The beating of the drum allows the shaman to achieve an altered state of consciousness or to travel on a journey between the physical and spiritual worlds Much fascination surrounds the role that the acoustics of the drum play to the shaman Shaman drums are generally constructed of an animal skin stretched over a bent wooden hoop with a handle across the hoop Roles Edit South Moluccan shaman in an exorcism ritual involving children Buru Indonesia 1920 A shaman of the Itneg people in the Philippines renewing an offering to the spirit anito of a warrior s shield kalasag 1922 79 Shamans have been conceptualized as those who are able to gain knowledge and power to heal in the spiritual world or dimension Most shamans have dreams or visions that convey certain messages Shamans may claim to have or have acquired many spirit guides who they believe guide and direct them in their travels in the spirit world These spirit guides are always thought to be present within the shaman although others are said to encounter them only when the shaman is in a trance The spirit guide energizes the shamans enabling them to enter the spiritual dimension Shamans claim to heal within the communities and the spiritual dimension by returning lost parts of the human soul from wherever they have gone Shamans also claim to cleanse excess negative energies which are said to confuse or pollute the soul Shamans act as mediators in their cultures 80 81 Shamans claim to communicate with the spirits on behalf of the community including the spirits of the deceased Shamans believe they can communicate with both living and dead to alleviate unrest unsettled issues and to deliver gifts to the spirits Among the Selkups the sea duck is a spirit animal Ducks fly in the air and dive in the water and are thus believed to belong to both the upper world and the world below 82 Among other Siberian peoples these characteristics are attributed to waterfowl in general 83 The upper world is the afterlife primarily associated with deceased humans and is believed to be accessed by soul journeying through a portal in the sky The lower world or world below is the afterlife primarily associated with animals and is believed to be accessed by soul journeying through a portal in the earth 84 In shamanic cultures many animals are regarded as spirit animals Shamans perform a variety of functions depending upon their respective cultures 85 healing 49 86 leading a sacrifice 87 preserving traditions by storytelling and songs 88 fortune telling 89 and acting as a psychopomp guide of souls 90 A single shaman may fulfill several of these functions 85 The functions of a shaman may include either guiding to their proper abode the souls of the dead which may be guided either one at a time or in a group depending on the culture and the curing of ailments The ailments may be either purely physical afflictions such as disease which are claimed to be cured by gifting flattering threatening or wrestling the disease spirit sometimes trying all these sequentially and which may be completed by displaying a supposedly extracted token of the disease spirit displaying this even if fraudulent is supposed to impress the disease spirit that it has been or is in the process of being defeated so that it will retreat and stay out of the patient s body or else mental including psychosomatic afflictions such as persistent terror which is likewise believed to be cured by similar methods In most languages a different term other than the one translated shaman is usually applied to a religious official leading sacrificial rites priest or to a raconteur sage of traditional lore there may be more of an overlap in functions with that of a shaman however in the case of an interpreter of omens or of dreams There are distinct types of shamans who perform more specialized functions For example among the Nani people a distinct kind of shaman acts as a psychopomp 91 Other specialized shamans may be distinguished according to the type of spirits or realms of the spirit world with which the shaman most commonly interacts These roles vary among the Nenets Enets and Selkup shamans 92 93 The assistant of an Oroqen shaman called jardalanin or second spirit knows many things about the associated beliefs He or she accompanies the rituals and interprets the behaviors of the shaman 94 Despite these functions the jardalanin is not a shaman For this interpretative assistant it would be unwelcome to fall into a trance 95 Ecological aspect EditAmong the Tucano people a sophisticated system exists for environmental resources management and for avoiding resource depletion through overhunting This system is conceptualized mythologically and symbolically by the belief that breaking hunting restrictions may cause illness As the primary teacher of tribal symbolism the shaman may have a leading role in this ecological management actively restricting hunting and fishing The shaman is able to release game animals or their souls from their hidden abodes 96 97 The Piaroa people have ecological concerns related to shamanism 98 Among the Inuit the angakkuq shamans fetch the souls of game from remote places 99 100 or soul travel to ask for game from mythological beings like the Sea Woman 101 Economics EditThe way shamans get sustenance and take part in everyday life varies across cultures In many Inuit groups they provide services for the community and get a due payment who and believe the payment is given to the helping spirits 102 An account states that the gifts and payments that a shaman receives are given by his partner spirit Since it obliges the shaman to use his gift and to work regularly in this capacity the spirit rewards him with the goods that it receives 103 These goods however are only welcome addenda They are not enough to enable a full time shaman Shamans live like any other member of the group as a hunter or housewife Due to the popularity of ayahuasca tourism in South America there are practitioners in areas frequented by backpackers who make a living from leading ceremonies 104 102 Academic study Edit Sami noaidi with his drum Cognitive and evolutionary approaches Edit There are two major frameworks among cognitive and evolutionary scientists for explaining shamanism The first proposed by anthropologist Michael Winkelman is known as the neurotheological theory 105 106 According to Winkelman shamanism develops reliably in human societies because it provides valuable benefits to the practitioner their group and individual clients In particular the trance states induced by dancing hallucinogens and other triggers are hypothesized to have an integrative effect on cognition allowing communication among mental systems that specialize in theory of mind social intelligence and natural history 107 With this cognitive integration the shaman can better predict the movement of animals resolve group conflicts plan migrations and provide other useful services The neurotheological theory contrasts with the by product or subjective model of shamanism developed by Harvard anthropologist Manvir Singh 1 108 109 According to Singh shamanism is a cultural technology that adapts to or hacks our psychological biases to convince us that a specialist can influence important but uncontrollable outcomes 110 Citing work on the psychology of magic and superstition Singh argues that humans search for ways of influencing uncertain events such as healing illness controlling rain or attracting animals As specialists compete to help their clients control these outcomes they drive the evolution of psychologically compelling magic producing traditions adapted to people s cognitive biases Shamanism Singh argues is the culmination of this cultural evolutionary process a psychologically appealing method for controlling uncertainty For example some shamanic practices exploit our intuitions about humanness Practitioners use trance and dramatic initiations to seemingly become entities distinct from normal humans and thus more apparently capable of interacting with the invisible forces believed to oversee important outcomes Influential cognitive and anthropological scientists such as Pascal Boyer and Nicholas Humphrey have endorsed Singh s approach 111 112 although other researchers have criticized Singh s dismissal of individual and group level benefits 113 David Lewis Williams explains the origins of shamanic practice and some of its precise forms through aspects of human consciousness evinced in cave art and LSD experiments alike 114 Ecological approaches and systems theory Edit Gerardo Reichel Dolmatoff relates these concepts to developments in the ways that modern science systems theory ecology new approaches in anthropology and archeology treats causality in a less linear fashion 96 He also suggests a cooperation of modern science and Indigenous lore 115 Historical origins Edit Shamanic practices may originate as early as the Paleolithic predating all organized religions 116 117 and certainly as early as the Neolithic period 117 The earliest known undisputed burial of a shaman and by extension the earliest undisputed evidence of shamans and shamanic practices dates back to the early Upper Paleolithic era c 30 000 BP in what is now the Czech Republic 118 Sanskrit scholar and comparative mythologist Michael Witzel proposes that all of the world s mythologies and also the concepts and practices of shamans can be traced to the migrations of two prehistoric populations the Gondwana type of circa 65 000 years ago and the Laurasian type of circa 40 000 years ago 119 In November 2008 researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem announced the discovery of a 12 000 year old site in Israel that is perceived as one of the earliest known shaman burials The elderly woman had been arranged on her side with her legs apart and folded inward at the knee Ten large stones were placed on the head pelvis and arms Among her unusual grave goods were 50 complete tortoise shells a human foot and certain body parts from animals such as a cow tail and eagle wings Other animal remains came from a boar leopard and two martens It seems that the woman was perceived as being in a close relationship with these animal spirits researchers noted The grave was one of at least 28 graves at the site located in a cave in lower Galilee and belonging to the Natufian culture but is said to be unlike any other among the Epipaleolithic Natufians or in the Paleolithic period 120 Semiotic and hermeneutic approaches Edit A debated etymology of the word shaman is one who knows 11 121 implying among other things that the shaman is an expert in keeping together the multiple codes of the society and that to be effective shamans must maintain a comprehensive view in their mind which gives them certainty of knowledge 10 According to this view the shaman uses and the audience understands multiple codes expressing meanings in many ways verbally musically artistically and in dance Meanings may be manifested in objects such as amulets 121 If the shaman knows the culture of their community well 81 122 123 and acts accordingly their audience will know the used symbols and meanings and therefore trust the shamanic worker 123 124 There are also semiotic theoretical approaches to shamanism 125 126 127 and examples of mutually opposing symbols in academic studies of Siberian lore distinguishing a white shaman who contacts sky spirits for good aims by day from a black shaman who contacts evil spirits for bad aims by night 128 Series of such opposing symbols referred to a world view behind them Analogously to the way grammar arranges words to express meanings and convey a world also this formed a cognitive map 10 129 Shaman s lore is rooted in the folklore of the community which provides a mythological mental map 130 131 Juha Pentikainen uses the concept grammar of mind 131 132 Armin Geertz coined and introduced the hermeneutics 133 or ethnohermeneutics 129 interpretation Hoppal extended the term to include not only the interpretation of oral and written texts but that of visual texts as well including motions gestures and more complex rituals and ceremonies performed for instance by shamans 134 Revealing the animistic views in shamanism but also their relevance to the contemporary world where ecological problems have validated paradigms of balance and protection 131 Decline and revitalization and tradition preserving movements EditTraditional Indigenous shamanism is believed to be declining around the world Whalers who frequently interacted with Inuit groups are one source of this decline in that region 135 A shaman doctor of Kyzyl 2005 Attempts are being made to preserve and revitalize Tuvan shamanism 136 former authentic shamans have begun to practice again and young apprentices are being educated in an organized way 137 In many areas former shamans ceased to fulfill the functions in the community they used to as they felt mocked by their own community 138 or regarded their own past as deprecated and were unwilling to talk about it to ethnographers 139 Besides personal communications of former shamans folklore texts may narrate directly about a deterioration process For example a Buryat epic text details the wonderful deeds of the ancient first shaman Kara Gurgan 140 he could even compete with God create life steal back the soul of the sick from God without his consent A subsequent text laments that shamans of older times were stronger possessing capabilities like omnividence 141 fortune telling even for decades in the future moving as fast as a bullet 142 In most affected areas shamanic practices ceased to exist with authentic shamans dying and their personal experiences dying with them The loss of memories is not always lessened by the fact the shaman is not always the only person in a community who knows the beliefs and motives related to the local shaman hood 94 95 Although the shaman is often believed and trusted precisely because they accommodate to the beliefs of the community 123 several parts of the knowledge related to the local shamanhood consist of personal experiences of the shaman or root in their family life 143 thus those are lost with their death Besides that in many cultures the entire traditional belief system has become endangered often together with a partial or total language shift with the other people of the community remembering the associated beliefs and practices or the language at all grew old or died many folklore memories songs and texts were forgotten which may threaten even such peoples who could preserve their isolation until the middle of the 20th century like the Nganasan 144 Some areas could enjoy a prolonged resistance due to their remoteness Variants of shamanism among Inuit were once a widespread and very diverse phenomenon but today is rarely practiced as well as already having been in decline among many groups even while the first major ethnological research was being done 145 e g among Inuit at the end of the 19th century Sagloq the last angakkuq who was believed to be able to travel to the sky and under the sea died and many other former shamanic capacities were lost during that time as well like ventriloquism and sleight of hand 146 The isolated location of Nganasan people allowed shamanism to be a living phenomenon among them even at the beginning of the 20th century 147 the last notable Nganasan shaman s ceremonies were recorded on film in the 1970s 148 After exemplifying the general decline even in the most remote areas there are revitalizations or tradition preserving efforts as a response Besides collecting the memories 149 there are also tradition preserving 150 and even revitalization efforts 151 led by authentic former shamans for example among the Sakha people 152 and Tuvans 137 Native Americans in the United States do not call their traditional spiritual ways shamanism However according to Richard L Allen research and policy analyst for the Cherokee Nation they are regularly overwhelmed with inquiries by and about fraudulent shamans aka plastic medicine people 153 He adds One may assume that anyone claiming to be a Cherokee shaman spiritual healer or pipe carrier is equivalent to a modern day medicine show and snake oil vendor 154 There are also neoshamanistic movements which usually differ from traditional shamanistic practice and beliefs in significant ways and often have more connection to the New Age communities than traditional cultures 155 Regional variations Edit Map of shamanism across the worldMain article Regional forms of shamanismSee also EditAnimism Divine madness Soul dualism Dukun Fashi Folk healer Folk magic Itako Mu shaman Neuroanthropology Pawang Plastic shaman Prehistoric medicine Reincarnation Ho Chunk Seidr Shaking Tent Ceremony Shaman King Soul catcher Soul flight Spirit spouse Tangki Tlamatini ZduhacReferences EditCitations Edit a b c d Singh Manvir 2018 The cultural evolution of shamanism Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41 e66 1 61 doi 10 1017 S0140525X17001893 PMID 28679454 S2CID 206264885 Mircea Eliade Vilmos Dioszegi May 12 2020 Shamanism Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved May 20 2020 Shamanism religious phenomenon centred on the shaman a person believed to achieve various powers through trance or ecstatic religious experience Although shamans repertoires vary from one culture to the next they are typically thought to have the ability to heal the sick to communicate with the otherworld and often to escort the souls of the dead to that otherworld Gredig Florian 2009 Finding New Cosmologies Berlin Lit Verlag Dr W Hopf a b c d Kehoe Alice Beck 2000 Shamans and religion an anthropological exploration in critical thinking Prospect Heights Ill Waveland Press ISBN 978 1 57766 162 7 Wernitznig Dagmar Europe s Indians Indians in Europe European Perceptions and Appropriations of Native American Cultures from Pocahontas to the Present University Press of America 2007 p 132 What happens further in the Plastic Shaman s fictitious story is highly irritating from a perspective of cultural hegemony The Injun elder does not only willingly share their spirituality with the white intruder but in fact must come to the conclusion that this intruder is as good an Indian as they are themselves Regarding Indian spirituality the Plastic Shaman even out Indians the actual ones The messianic element which Plastic Shamanism financially draws on is installed in the Yoda like elder themselves They are the ones while melodramatically parting from their spiritual offshoot who urge the Plastic Shaman to share their gift with the rest of the world Thus Plastic Shamans wipe their hands clean of any megalomaniac or missionizing undertones Licensed by the authority of an Indian elder they now have every right to spread their wisdom and if they make quite more than a buck with it then so be it The neocolonial ideology attached to this scenario leaves less room for cynicism Hutton 2001 p 32 Hutton Ronald 2001 Shamans Siberian Spirituality and the Western Imagination TPB OCLC 940167815 Juha Janhunan Siberian shamanistic terminology Memoires de la Societe Finno Ougrienne 1986 194 97 Crossley Pamela Kyle 1996 The Manchus Blackwell Publishers ISBN 978 1 55786 560 1 a b c d e Hoppal 2005 15 a b Dioszegi 1962 13 Januhnan 1986 98 Eliade Mircea 1989 Shamanism Arkana Books p 495 Written before 1676 first printed in 1861 see Hutton 2001 p vii Hutton 2001 p 32 Adam Brand Driejaarige Reize naar China Amsterdam 1698 transl A Journal of an Ambassy London 1698 see Laufer B Origin of the Word Shaman American Anthropologist 19 1917 361 71 and Bremmer J Travelling souls Greek shamanism reconsidered in Bremmer J N ed The Rise and Fall of the Afterlife London Routledge 2002 pp 7 40 PDF Archived 2013 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Tomaskova 2013 76 78 104 105 Chadwick Hector Munro Chadwick Nora Kershaw 1968 The Growth of Literature The University Press p 13 The terms shaman and the Russianized feminine form shamanka shamaness seeress are in general use to denote any persons of the Native professional class among the heathen Siberians and Tatars generally and there can be no doubt that they have come to be applied to a large number of different classes of people Hoppal Mihaly 2005 Samanok Eurazsiaban in Hungarian Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 978 963 05 8295 7 pp 77 287 Znamensky Andrei A 2005 Az osiseg szepsege altaji torok samanok a sziberiai regionalis gondolkodasban 1860 1920 In Molnar Adam ed Csodaszarvas Ostortenet vallas es nephagyomany Vol I in Hungarian Budapest Molnar Kiado pp 117 34 ISBN 978 963 218 200 1 p 128 Hutton 2001 pp vii viii Circle of Tengerism Archived from the original on January 26 2013 a b Definition of Shaman by Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on April 2 2017 Juha Janhunen Siberian shamanistic terminology Suomalais ugrilaisen Seuran toimituksia Memoires de la Societe Finno Ougrienne 1986 194 97 98 Alberts Thomas 2015 Shamanism Discourse Modernity Farnham Ashgate pp 73 79 ISBN 978 1 4724 3986 4 Fatal Naming Rituals Hazlitt July 19 2018 Retrieved March 5 2020 a b c Mircea Eliade Shamanism Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy Bollingen Series LXXVI Princeton University Press 1972 pp 3 7 Belcourt Billy Ray July 19 2018 Fatal Naming Rituals Hazlitt Retrieved March 3 2020 a b ISSR 2001 Summer abstract online in second half of second paragraph Hoppal amp Szathmari amp Takacs 2006 14 Hoppal 1998 40 Vitebsky 1996 11 Rydving Hakan 2011 Le chamanisme aujourd hui constructions et deconstructions d une illusion scientifique Etudes Mongoles et Siberiennes Centrasiatiques et Tibetaines 42 42 doi 10 4000 emscat 1815 Bumochir Dulam 2014 Institutionalization of Mongolian shamanism from primitivism to civilization Asian Ethnicity 15 4 473 491 doi 10 1080 14631369 2014 939331 S2CID 145329835 Hangartner Judith 2011 The Constitution and Contestation of Darhad Shamans Power in Contemporary Mongolia Leiden Global Oriental ISBN 978 1 906876 11 1 Kollmar Paulenz Karenina 2012 The Invention of Shamanism in 18th Century Mongolian Elite Discourse Rocznik Orientalistyczny LXV 1 90 106 Shamanism religion Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved September 7 2018 Definition of Shamanism Merriam Webster com Retrieved September 7 2018 Using the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Litigation Reflections on the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Hart Publishing 2011 doi 10 5040 9781472565358 ch 005 ISBN 978 1 84113 878 7 Oosten Jarich Laugrand Frederic Remie Cornelius Summer 2006 Perceptions of Decline Inuit Shamanism in the Canadian Arctic Ethnohistory 53 3 445 447 doi 10 1215 00141801 2006 001 Mongolia s Lost Secrets in Pictures The Last Tuvan Shaman Lonely Planet August 21 2014 Retrieved October 19 2018 Jardine Bradley Kupfer Matthew Welcome to the Tuva Republic The Diplomat Retrieved October 19 2018 KING THOMAS 2018 INCONVENIENT INDIAN a curious account of native people in north america UNIV OF MINNESOTA Press ISBN 978 1 5179 0446 3 OCLC 1007305354 Ellingson Ter January 16 2001 The Ecologically Noble Savage The Myth of the Noble Savage University of California Press pp 342 358 doi 10 1525 california 9780520222687 003 0023 ISBN 978 0 520 22268 7 a b c Salak Kira Hell and Back National Geographic Adventure Wilbert Johannes Vidal Silvia M 2004 Whitehead Neil L Wright Robin eds In Darkness and Secrecy The Anthropology of Assault Sorcery and Witchcraft in Amazonia Durham NC Duke University Press doi 10 1215 9780822385837 ISBN 978 0 8223 3333 3 S2CID 146752685 Merkur 1985 4 Vitebsky 1996 11 14 107 Hoppal 2005 27 30 36 a b Sem Tatyana Shamanic Healing Rituals Russian Museum of Ethnography Hoppal 2005 27 Kleivan amp Sonne 1985 7 19 21 Gabus Jean A karibu eszkimok Gondolat Kiado Budapest 1970 Hungarian translation of the original Vie et coutumes des Esquimaux Caribous Libraire Payot Lausanne 1944 It describes the life of Caribou Eskimo groups a b Swancutt Katherine Mazard Mireille 2018 Animism beyond the Soul Ontology Reflexivity and the Making of Anthropological Knowledge New York Berghahn Books p 102 ISBN 978 1 78533 865 6 Hoppal 2007c 18 Hoppal 2005 99 McCoy V R March 30 2018 Shaman the Dawn s People BookBaby ISBN 978 1 7321874 0 5 Buenaflor Erika May 28 2019 Curanderismo Soul Retrieval Ancient Shamanic Wisdom to Restore the Sacred Energy of the Soul Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 59143 341 5 A Brief History of the San Pedro Cactus Retrieved June 6 2015 Terry M 2017 Lophophora williamsii IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T151962A121515326 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T151962A121515326 en Retrieved November 11 2021 Entheogen dictionary com retrieved March 13 2012 Souza Rafael Sampaio Octaviano de Albuquerque Ulysses Paulino de Monteiro Julio Marcelino Amorim Elba Lucia Cavalcanti de 2008 Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology Jurema Preta Mimosa tenuiflora Willd Poir a review of its traditional use phytochemistry and pharmacology Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology 51 5 937 947 doi 10 1590 S1516 89132008000500010 Voss Richard W Prue 2014 Peyote Religion In Leeming David A ed Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion Boston MA Springer pp 1330 33 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 6086 2 506 ISBN 978 1 4614 6085 5 Declaran Patrimonio Cultural de la Nacion a los conocimientos saberes y usos del cactus San Pedro elperuano pe in Spanish November 7 2022 Retrieved December 10 2022 Guzman Gaston 2009 The hallucinogenic mushrooms diversity traditions use and abuse with special reference to the genus Psilocybe in Misra J K Deshmukh S K eds Fungi from different environments Enfield NH Science Publishers pp 256 77 ISBN 978 1 57808 578 1 Wilbert Johannes 1987 Tobacco and Shamanism in South America New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 05790 4 McClain Matthew Sean July 29 2016 Herb amp Shaman Recreating the Cannabis Mythos PhD Pacifica Graduate Institute This study considers the archetypal role of Cannabis in many agricultural rites and shamanic traditions Labate Beatriz Caiuby Cavnar Clancy eds 2014 Ayahuasca Shamanism in the Amazon and Beyond Oxford ritual studies Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 934119 1 Dalgamo Phil June 2007 Subjective Effects of Salvia Divinorum Journal of Psychoactive Drugs 39 2 143 49 doi 10 1080 02791072 2007 10399872 PMID 17703708 S2CID 40477640 Mazatec curanderos use Salvia for divinatory rituals and healing ceremonies Mahop Tonye Uden Alex Asaha Stella Ndam Nouhou Sunderland Terry May 2004 Iboga Tabernathe iboga in Clark Laurie E Sunderland Terry C H eds The Key Non Timber Forest Products of Central Africa State of the Knowledge PDF Technical Paper no 22 SD Publication Series Office of Sustainable Development Bureau for Africa U S Agency for International Development p 166 retrieved January 25 2018 The use of T iboga in Gabonese religious ceremonies has been recorded from an early date Prayag Girish Mura Paolo Hall Michael Fontaine Julien May 2015 Drug or spirituality seekers Consuming ayahuasca Annals of Tourism Research 52 175 177 doi 10 1016 j annals 2015 03 008 ISSN 0160 7383 healthCheck PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 2 2015 Retrieved June 6 2015 a b Nattiez 5 Inuit Throat Singing Retrieved June 6 2015 Turner et al p 440 Noll amp Shi 2004 avail online Internet Archive copy Halifax Joan 1982 Shaman The Wounded Healer London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 81029 3 OCLC 8800269 Baruske 1969 24 50 51 Kleivan amp Sonne 1985 25 Fay Cooper Cole amp Albert Gale 1922 The Tinguian Social Religious and Economic life of a Philippine tribe Field Museum of Natural History Anthropological Series 14 2 235 493 Hoppal 2005 45 a b Boglar 2001 24 Hoppal 2005 94 Vitebsky 1996 46 Ingerman Sandra 2004 Shamanic Journeying A Beginner s Guide Sounds True ISBN 978 1 59179 943 6 a b Hoppal 2005 25 Hoppal 2005 27 28 Hoppal 2005 28 33 Hoppal 2005 37 Hoppal 2005 34 35 Hoppal 2005 36 Hoppal 2005 61 64 Hoppal 2005 87 95 Shamanism in Siberia Part III Religion Chapter IX Types of Shamans Retrieved June 6 2015 a b Noll amp Shi 2004 10 footnote 10 see online Internet Archive copy a b Noll amp Shi 2004 8 9 see online Internet Archive copy a b Reichel Dolmatoff 1997 Vitebsky 1996 107 Boglar 2001 26 Merkur 1985 5 Vitebsky 1996 108 Kleivan amp Sonne 27 28 a b Merkur 1985 3 Oelschlaegel Anett C 2016 Plural World Interpretations Berlin LIT Verlag Munster p 206 ISBN 978 3 643 90788 2 Kleivan amp Sonne 1985 24 Winkelman Michael 2000 Shamanism the neural ecology of consciousness and healing Bergin amp Garvey ISBN 978 0 89789 704 4 OCLC 1026223037 Winkelman Michael Shamanism and cognitive evolution Cambridge Archaeological Journal 12 1 71 101 doi 10 1017 S0959774302000045 S2CID 162355879 Winkelman Michael 1986 Trance states A theoretical model and cross cultural analysis Ethos 14 2 174 203 doi 10 1525 eth 1986 14 2 02a00040 Reuell Peter 2018 The mystery of the medicine man Harvard Gazette Singh Manvir 2018 Why is there shamanism Developing the cultural evolutionary theory and addressing alternative accounts Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41 e92 doi 10 1017 S0140525X17002230 PMID 31064458 S2CID 147706275 Singh Manvir Modern shamans Financial managers political pundits and others who help tame life s uncertainty The Conversation Retrieved May 2 2019 Boyer Pascal 2018 Missing links The psychology and epidemiology of shamanistic beliefs Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41 e71 doi 10 1017 S0140525X17002023 PMID 31064451 S2CID 147706563 Humphrey Nicholas 2018 Shamans as healers When magical structure becomes practical function Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41 e77 doi 10 1017 S0140525X17002084 PMID 31064454 S2CID 147706046 Watson Jones Rachel E Legare 2018 The social functions of shamanism Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41 e88 doi 10 1017 S0140525X17002199 PMID 31064460 S2CID 147706978 David Lewis Williams The Mind in the Cave Consciousness and the Origins of Art London Thames and Hudson 2002 Gerardo Reichel Dolmatoff A View from the Headwaters The Ecologist Vol 29 No 4 July 1999 Jean Clottes Shamanism in Prehistory Bradshaw foundation Archived from the original on April 30 2008 Retrieved March 11 2008 a b Karl J Narr Prehistoric religion Britannica online encyclopedia 2008 Archived from the original on April 9 2008 Retrieved March 28 2008 Tedlock Barbara 2005 The Woman in the Shaman s Body Reclaiming the Feminine in Religion and Medicine New York Bantam Witzel 2011 Earliest known shaman grave site found study reported by Reuters via Yahoo News November 4 2008 archived see Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences a b Hoppal 2005 14 Pentikainen 1995 270 a b c Hoppal 2005 25 26 43 Hoppal 2004 14 Hoppal 2005 13 15 58 197 Hoppal 2006a 11 Hoppal 2006b 175 Hoppal 2007c 24 25 a b Hoppal Mihaly Nature worship in Siberian shamanism Hoppal 2007b 12 13 a b c Hoppal 2007c 25 Pentikainen 1995 270 71 Merkur 1985 v Hoppal 2007b 13 Oosten Jarich Laugrand Frederic Remie Cornelius 2006 Perceptions of Decline Inuit Shamanism in the Canadian Arctic American Society for Ethnohistory 53 3 445 77 doi 10 1215 00141801 2006 001 Hoppal 2005 117 a b Hoppal 2005 259 Boglar 2001 19 20 Dioszegi 1960 37 39 Eliade 2001 76 Chpt 3 about obtaining shamanic capabilities Omnividence A word created by Edwin A Abbott in his book titled Flatland Dioszegi 1960 88 89 Hoppal 2005 224 Nagy 1998 232 Merkur 1985 132 Merkur 1985 134 Hoppal 2005 92 Hoppal 1994 62 Hoppal 2005 88 Hoppal 2005 93 Hoppal 2005 111 117 19 128 132 133 34 252 63 Hoppal 2005 257 58 Hagan Helene E The Plastic Medicine People Circle Archived 2013 03 05 at the Wayback Machine Sonoma Free County Press Accessed 31 Jan 2013 Pseudo Shamans Cherokee Statement Retrieved June 23 2008 Vitebsky 1996 150 53 Sources Edit Baruske Heinz 1969 Eskimo Marchen Die Marchen der Weltliteratur in German Dusseldorf Koln Eugen Diederichs Verlag The title means Eskimo tales the series means The tales of world literature Boglar Lajos 2001 A kultura arcai Mozaikok a kulturalis antropologia koreibol TARStudomany in Hungarian Budapest Napvilag Kiado ISBN 978 963 9082 94 6 The title means The faces of culture Mosaics from the area of cultural anthropology Czaplicka M A 1914 Types of shaman Shamanism in Siberia Aboriginal Siberia A study in social anthropology preface by Marett R R Somerville College University of Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 1 60506 060 6 Deschenes Bruno 2002 Inuit Throat Singing Musical Traditions The Magazine for Traditional Music Throughout the World Dioszegi Vilmos 1968 Tracing shamans in Siberia The story of an ethnographical research expedition Translated by Anita Rajkay Babo from Hungarian Oosterhout Anthropological Publications Dioszegi Vilmos 1962 Samanizmus Elet es Tudomany Kiskonyvtar in Hungarian Budapest Gondolat ISBN 978 963 9147 13 3 The title means Shamanism Dioszegi Vilmos 1998 1958 A samanhit emlekei a magyar nepi muveltsegben in Hungarian 1st reprint ed Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 978 963 05 7542 3 The title means Remnants of shamanistic beliefs in Hungarian folklore Fienup Riordan Ann 1994 Boundaries and Passages Rule and Ritual in Yup ik Eskimo Oral Tradition Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 585 12190 1 Fock Niels 1963 Waiwai Religion and society of an Amazonian tribe Nationalmuseets skrifter Etnografisk Raekke Ethnographical series VIII Copenhagen The National Museum of Denmark Freuchen Peter 1961 Book of the Eskimos Cleveland New York The World Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 449 30802 8 Hajdu Peter 1975 A rokonsag nyelvi hattere In Hajdu Peter ed Urali nepek Nyelvrokonaink kulturaja es hagyomanyai in Hungarian Budapest Corvina Kiado ISBN 978 963 13 0900 3 The title means Uralic peoples Culture and traditions of our linguistic relatives the chapter means Linguistical background of the relationship Hoppal Mihaly 1994 Samanok lelkek es jelkepek in Hungarian Budapest Helikon Kiado ISBN 978 963 208 298 1 The title means Shamans souls and symbols Hoppal Mihaly 1998 A honfoglalok hitvilaga es a magyar samanizmus Folklor es kozosseg in Hungarian Budapest Szephalom Konyvmuhely pp 40 45 ISBN 978 963 9028 14 2 The title means The belief system of Hungarians when they entered the Pannonian Basin and their shamanism Hoppal Mihaly 2005 Samanok Eurazsiaban in Hungarian Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 978 963 05 8295 7 The title means Shamans in Eurasia the book is published also in German Estonian and Finnish Site of publisher with short description on the book in Hungarian Archived 2010 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Hoppal Mihaly 2006a Samanok kulturak es kutatok az ezredfordulon In Hoppal Mihaly Szathmari Botond Takacs Andras eds Samanok es kulturak Budapest Gondolat pp 9 25 ISBN 978 963 9450 28 8 The chapter title means Shamans cultures and researchers in the millenary the book title means Shamans and cultures Hoppal Mihaly 2007b Is Shamanism a Folk Religion Shamans and Traditions Vol 13 Bibliotheca Shamanistica Budapest Akademiai Kiado pp 11 16 ISBN 978 963 05 8521 7 Hoppal Mihaly 2007c Eco Animism of Siberian Shamanhood Shamans and Traditions Vol 13 Bibliotheca Shamanistica Budapest Akademiai Kiado pp 17 26 ISBN 978 963 05 8521 7 Janhunen Juha Siberian shamanistic terminology Memoires de la Societe Finno Ougrienne 1986 194 97 117 Hugh Jones Christine 1980 From the Milk River Spatial and Temporal Processes in Northwest Amazonia Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 22544 1 Hugh Jones Stephen 1980 The Palm and the Pleiades Initiation and Cosmology in Northwest Amazonia Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 21952 5 Kleivan Inge B Sonne 1985 Eskimos Greenland and Canada Iconography of religions section VIII Arctic Peoples fascicle 2 Leiden The Netherlands Institute of Religious Iconography State University Groningen E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 07160 5 Menovscikov G A G A Menovshikov 1968 Popular Conceptions Religious Beliefs and Rites of the Asiatic Eskimoes In Dioszegi Vilmos ed Popular beliefs and folklore tradition in Siberia Budapest Akademiai Kiado Nagy Beata Boglarka 1998 Az eszaki szamojedok In Csepregi Marta ed Finnugor kalauz Panorama in Hungarian Budapest Medicina Konyvkiado pp 221 34 ISBN 978 963 243 813 9 The chapter means Northern Samoyedic peoples the title means Finno Ugric guide Nattiez Jean Jacques Inuit Games and Songs Chants et Jeux des Inuit Musiques amp musiciens du monde Musics amp musicians of the world Montreal Research Group in Musical Semiotics Faculty of Music University of Montreal The songs are available online on the ethnopoetics website curated by Jerome Rothenberg Noll Richard Shi Kun 2004 Chuonnasuan Meng Jin Fu The Last Shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China PDF 韓國宗敎硏究 Journal of Korean Religions Vol 6 Seoul KR 西江大學校 宗教硏究所 Sŏgang Taehakkyo Chonggyo Yŏnʾguso pp 135 62 Archived from the original PDF on March 26 2009 Retrieved May 28 2020 It describes the life of Chuonnasuan the last shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China Reinhard Johan 1976 Shamanism and Spirit Possession The Definition Problem In Spirit Possession in the Nepal Himalayas J Hitchcock amp R Jones eds New Delhi Vikas Publishing House pp 12 20 Shimamura Ippei The roots Seekers Shamanism and Ethnicity Among the Mongol Buryats Yokohama Japan Shumpusha 2014 Singh Manvir 2018 The cultural evolution of shamanism Behavioral amp Brain Sciences 41 e66 1 61 doi 10 1017 S0140525X17001893 PMID 28679454 S2CID 206264885 Summary of the cultural evolutionary and cognitive foundations of shamanism published with commentaries by 25 scholars including anthropologists philosophers and psychologists Turner Robert P Lukoff David Barnhouse Ruth Tiffany amp Lu Francis G 1995 Religious or Spiritual Problem A Culturally Sensitive Diagnostic Category in the DSM IV Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease Vol 183 No 7 pp 435 44 Voigt Miklos 2000 Saman a szo es ertelme Vilagnak kezdetetol fogva Torteneti folklorisztikai tanulmanyok in Hungarian Budapest Universitas Konyvkiado pp 41 45 ISBN 978 963 9104 39 6 The chapter discusses the etymology and meaning of word shaman Winkelman Michael 2000 Shamanism The neural ecology of consciousness and healing Westport CT Bergen amp Gavey ISBN 978 963 9104 39 6 Major work on the evolutionary and psychological origins of shamanism Witzel Michael 2011 Shamanism in Northern and Southern Eurasia their distinctive methods and change of consciousness PDF Social Science Information 50 1 39 61 doi 10 1177 0539018410391044 S2CID 144745844 Further reading EditJoseph Campbell The Masks of God Primitive Mythology 1959 reprint New York and London Penguin Books 1976 ISBN 978 0 14 019443 2 Harner Michael The Way of the Shaman A Guide to Power and Healing Harper amp Row Publishers NY 1980 Richard de Mille ed The Don Juan Papers Further Castaneda Controversies Santa Barbara California Ross Erikson 1980 George Devereux Shamans as Neurotics American Anthropologist New Series Vol 63 No 5 Part 1 Oct 1961 pp 1088 90 Jay Courtney Fikes Carlos Castaneda Academic Opportunism and the Psychedelic Sixties Millennia Press Canada 1993 ISBN 978 0 9696960 0 1 Ake Hultkrantz Honorary Editor in Chief Shaman Journal of the International Society for Shamanistic Research Philip Jenkins Dream Catchers How Mainstream America Discovered Native Spirituality New York Oxford University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 19 516115 1 Alice Kehoe Shamans and Religion An Anthropological Exploration in Critical Thinking 2000 London Waveland Press ISBN 978 1 57766 162 7 David Charles Manners In the Shadow of Crows contains first hand accounts of the Nepalese jhankri tradition Oxford Signal Books 2011 ISBN 978 1 904955 92 4 Jordan D Paper The Spirits are Drunk Comparative Approaches to Chinese Religion Albany New York State University of New York Press 1995 ISBN 978 0 7914 2315 8 Smith Frederick M 2006 The Self Possessed Deity and Spirit Possession in South Asian Literature Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 13748 5 pp 195 202 Barbara Tedlock Time and the Highland Maya U of New Mexico Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 8263 1358 4 Silvia Tomaskova Wayward Shamans the prehistory of an idea University of California Press 2013 ISBN 978 0 520 27532 4 Michel Weber Shamanism and proto consciousness in Rene Lebrun Julien De Vos et E Van Quickelberghe eds Deus Unicus Actes du colloque Aux origines du monotheisme et du scepticisme religieux organise a Louvain la Neuve les 7 et 8 juin 2013 par le Centre d histoire des Religions Cardinal Julien Ries Cardinalis Julien Ries et Pierre Bordreuil in memoriam Turnhout Brepols coll Homo Religiosus serie II 14 2015 pp 247 60 Andrei Znamenski Shamanism in Siberia Russian Records of Siberian Spirituality Dordrech and Boston Kluwer Springer 2003 ISBN 978 1 4020 1740 7 Andrei Znamenski The Beauty of the Primitive Shamanism and Western Imagination New York Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 1951 7231 7External links Edit Look up shamanism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shamanism AFECT A charitable organization protecting traditional cultures in northern Thailand Chuonnasuan Meng Jin Fu The Last Shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China by Richard Noll and Kun Shi Internet Archive copy from New Age Frauds and Plastic Shamans an organization devoted to alerting seekers about fraudulent teachers and helping them avoid being exploited or participating in exploitation Shamanic Healing Rituals by Tatyana Sem Russian Museum of Ethnography Shamanism and the Image of the Teutonic Deity odinn by A Asbjorn Jon Shamanism in Siberia photographs by Standa Krupar Studies in Siberian Shamanism and Religions of the Finno Ugrian Peoples by Aado Lintrop Folk Belief and Media Group of the Estonian Literary Museum A View from the Headwaters by Gerardo Reichel Dolmatoff Amazonian Indigenous peoples and ecology Samgaldai NGO A charitable non for profit NGO for preserving Mongolian traditional Shamanic practices and rituals operating in Mongolia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shamanism amp oldid 1130937878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.