The Anthropology of Magic Witchcraft and Religion Shamanism
- Slides: 27
The Anthropology of Magic, Witchcraft, and Religion Shamanism
Shamanism & The Modern World • a growing interest in traditional cultures and their practices • “shamanic tourism” • “neoshamanism” or core shamanism
The Modern Interest in Shamanism • Reflects the needs and desires of those people who are interested in shamanism • Based upon anthropological research • Posits a universal aspect to shamanism
types of cult institutions 1. 2. 3. 4. individualistic shamanic communal ecclesiastical 1. 2. Olympian monotheistic
individualistic cult institutions • not performed by specialists each person enters into his or her own relationship with supernatural entities requires no intermediaries • examples: • • • vision quests hunting magic “luck” “children’s cult
shamanic cult institutions • • involve part-time practitioners involves simplest expression of religious division of labor • examples: • • • shamans proper diviners medicine men palm readers astrologers
The “Earliest” Religion?
Universal Human Needs and “Cultural Institutions” • obtaining food Øhunter Øgatherer Øfarmer • passing on culture Øparent Øteacher • securing shelter Øexplorer Øbuilder • procuring goods Øproducer Øtrader Ømerchant
What is a Shaman? • saman – an Evenk (Tungus) word meaning one who is excited, moved, raised” • in the strict sense, a Siberian or Mongolian spiritual practitioner
Anthropological Understanding of Shamanism • not a single, monolithic religion • a cross-cultural form of spiritual practice, typically serving the needs of the shaman’s society • a cultural universal
Core Functions of Shamanism • maintain and restore health within the group • maintain and restore balance between the group and the rest of the universe • provide humans with a sense of control over the world
Why “Control”? • the natural and cultural worlds exist prior to our birth • we must develop relationships with these preexisting worlds • most of these relationships are learned from others
Shamans Address the Human Needs to • secure food • heal disease • cope with death • comprehend the universe
Securing Food • locating game • ensuring continuity of animals • maintaining harmony with the animal world
Healing Disease • diagnosing causes • determining treatments • combating spirits • retrieving souls
Coping with Death • explaining causes of death • guiding the soul into the afterlife • freeing the soul from attachment to the living
Comprehending the Universe • explaining the cosmos • cosmology • mythology • exploring the cosmos • divination
Becoming a Shaman • shamanic call • study and initiation • learning to journey • death of the old person, and rebirth as a new person
Learning Culture → Enculturation (acquire a group’s concepts and values) • primarily via language and observation • usually takes place in a “normal” (consensual) state of consciousness • overlays concepts and values upon experience • results in shared concepts and values → tradition
Shamanic Training • often acquired from an established shaman • primarily via language and observation • usually takes place in consensual reality • posits – and provides for experience – of extraordinary realities → essentially traditional
The Shamanic Journey • leave ordinary reality to travel to extraordinary realities • drumming • dancing • plants • chanting • return with knowledge
Shamanic Journey from to Normal Reality with → ← Extraordinary Realities questions → ← for Answers but… what about the journey itself?
Shamanic States of Consciousness • are culturally defined • are repeatedly encountered • expand the cultural world view to encompass extraordinary realities • affirmation cultural tradition
The Shaman’s Answers • are obtained in multiple realities Ørealities defined by culture Øreflect learned models Øculturally conservative • are obtained by transcending realities Øsuspend cultural realities Øbreak down learned models Øculturally innovative
Shamanism • represents a methodology to acquire answers that will maintain tradition conservative effect • entails a possibility for generating answers that go beyond tradition innovative effect
Shamans Teach Us • that there are multiple realities • that the mythic is real • to serve others • to maintain harmony with the universe • that the quest has both personal and social dimensions
So You Want to be a Shaman • be prepared to “die” • be willing to serve others • be open to experiences that most people do not want to face
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