Dictionary Definition
shamanism
Noun
1 any animistic religion similar to Asian
shamanism (especially as practiced by certain Native American
tribes)
2 an animistic religion of northern Asia having
the belief that the mediation between the visible and the spirit
worlds is effected by shamans [syn: Asian
shamanism]
User Contributed Dictionary
Proper noun
shamanism- a range of traditional beliefs and practices concerned with communication with the spirit world
Translations
- Croatian: šamanizam
- German: Schamanismus
Extensive Definition
Shamanism refers to a range of traditional
beliefs and practices concerned with communication with the spirit
world. There are many variations of shamanism throughout the world,
though there are some beliefs that are shared by all forms of
shamanism:
- The spirits can play important roles in human lives.
- The shaman can control and/or cooperate with the spirits for the community's benefit.
- The spirits can be either good or bad.
- Shamans engage various processes and techniques to incite trance; such as: singing, dancing, taking entheogens, meditating and drumming.
- Animals play an important role, acting as omens and message-bearers, as well as representations of animal spirit guides.
- The shaman's spirit leaves the body and enters into the supernatural world during certain tasks.
- The shamans can treat illnesses or sickness; they are healers.
Shamans have the ability to diagnose and cure
human suffering and, in some societies, the ability to cause
suffering. This is believed to be accomplished by traversing the
axis
mundi and forming a special relationship with, or gaining
control over, spirits.
Shamans have been credited with the ability to control the weather,
divination, the
interpretation of dreams,
astral
projection, and traveling to upper and lower worlds.
Shamanistic traditions have existed throughout the world since
prehistoric
times.
Some anthropologists
and religious scholars define a shaman as an intermediary between
the natural and spiritual world, who travels between worlds in a
state of trance. Once in
the spirit world, the shaman would commune with the spirits for
assistance in healing, hunting or weather management.
Ripinsky-Naxon describes shamans as, “People who have a strong
interest in their surrounding environment and the society of which
they are a part.”
Other anthropologists critique the term
"shamanism", arguing that it is a culturally specific word and
institution and that by expanding it to fit any healer from any
traditional society it produces a false unity between these
cultures and creates a false idea of an initial human religion
predating all others. However, some others say that these
anthropologists simply fail to recognize the commonalities between
otherwise diverse traditional societies.
Shamanism is based on the premise that the
visible world is pervaded by invisible forces or spirits that
affect the lives of the living. In contrast to animism and animatism, which any and
usually all members of a society practice, shamanism requires
specialized knowledge or abilities. It could be said that shamans
are the experts employed by animists and animist communities.
Shamans are often organized into full-time ritual or spiritual
associations, like priests. In Indian culture as
well there are those who are called tantrics and are said to have
the power to control spirits and force them to do their bidding.
People often visit them for many reasons but most often it is to
ensure the spirit's aid in their work or to curse someone who they
feel is an enemy of theirs or opposes them.
Etymology
Shaman , (|ˈshämən; ˈshā-|) noun (pl. -man(s)) originally referred to the traditional healers of Turkic-Mongol areas such as Northern Asia (Siberia) and Mongolia, a "shaman" being the Turkic-Tungus word for such a practitioner and literally meaning "he or she who knows." The words in Turkic languages which refer to shamans are kam, and sometimes baksı.Some say the Tungusic word šamán is from Chinese
sha men (Chinese:
沙门,沙弥), "Buddhist monk," borrowed from Pali śamana,
ultimately from Sanskrit śramana
"ascetic," from śramati "he fatigues" (see shramana). "The word shaman is
in fact loosely used for almost any savage witch doctor who becomes
frenzied and has communication with spirits. In its original form
it appears to be a corruption of the Sanskrit Shramana, which,
indicating a disciple of Buddha, among the Mongolians became
synonymous with magician.". Other scholars assert that the word
comes directly from the Manchu
language, and indeed is "the only commonly used English word
that is a loan from this language".
Another explanation analyzes this Tungusic
word as containing root “sa-”, this means “to know”. “Shaman” is
“one who knows”: a person who is an expert in keeping together the
multiple codes through
which this complex belief system appears, and has a comprehensive
view of them in their mind with certainty of knowledge.
In any case, the proper plural form of the word
is "shaman" and not "shamans" or "shamen", as it is unrelated to
the English word "man". Like English, Tungus does not apply gender
to words. Therefore, shaman is correct for both a male and female
shaman. The word shamanka would be correct for one speaking Russian
as it is the Russian variation for the feminine gender, a Russian
language requirement.
In its common usage, it has replaced the older
English
language term witch
doctor, a term which unites the two stereotypical functions of
the shaman: knowledge of magical and other lore, and the ability to
cure a person and mend a situation. However, this term is generally
considered to be pejorative and anthropologically inaccurate.
Objections to the use of shaman as a generic term have been raised
as well, by both academics and traditional healers themselves,
given that the word comes from a specific place, people, and set of
practices.
The shaman is referred to in Greek mythology as a
necromancer and
could raise spirits and corpses to use as slaves, soldiers and
tools for divination.
Function
Shamans (in all cultures that are recorded as having shamans), can perform a plethora of functions: healing; leading a sacrifice; preserving the tradition by storytelling and songs; fortune-telling; acting as a psychopomp (literal meaning, “guide of souls”). In some cultures, a shaman may fulfill several functions in one person.As a psychopomp, the shaman may accompany the
incarnating soul of a newborn baby, or inversely, the departing
soul of the newly-dead. The shaman is seen as communicating with
the spirits on behalf of the community, including the spirits of
the dead. In some cultures, this mediator function of the shaman
may be illustrated well by some of the shaman's objects and
symbols. E.g. among the Selkups, a report
mentions sea
duck as a spirit-animal: ducks are capable of both flying, and
diving underwater, thus they are regarded as belonging to both the
upper world and the world underneath. Similarly, the shaman and the
jaguar are identified in some Amazonian cultures: the jaguar is
capable of moving freely on the ground, in the water, and climbing
trees (like the shaman's soul). In some Siberian cultures, it is
some water fowl species that are associated to the shaman in a
similar way, and the shaman is believed to take on its form.
“The Shaman's Tree” is an image found in several
cultures (Yakuts, Dolgans, Evenks), Celts, as a symbol
for mediation. The tree is seen as a being whose roots belong to
the world underneath; its trunk belongs to the middle,
human-inhabited word; and its top is related to the upper
world.
Distinct types of shamans
In some cultures there may be additional types of shamans, who perform more specialized functions. For example, among the Nanai people, a distinct kind of shaman acts as a psychopomp. 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 (paper; online). Among Huichol, there are two categories of shamans. This demonstrates the differences of shamans even within a single tribe.Ecological Aspect
In tropical rainforests, resources for human consumption are easily depletable. In some rainforest cultures, such as the Tucano, a sophisticated system exists for the management of resources, and for avoiding the depletion of these resources through overhunting. This system is conceptualized in a mythological context, involving symbolism and, in some cases, the belief that the breaking of 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, The Desana shaman has to negotiate with a mythological being for souls of game. Not only Tucanos, but also some other rainforest Indians have such ecological concerns related to their shamanism, for example Piaroa. or undertake a soul travel in order to promote hunting luck, e.g. by asking for game from mythological beings (Sea Woman).Soul concept, spirits
The plethora of functions described in the above
section may seem to be rather distinct tasks, but some important
underlying concepts join them.
Soul concept
In some cases, at some cultures, the soul concept can explain more,
seemingly unassociated phenomena::may be based closely on the soul
concepts of the belief system of the people served by the shaman
(online See also the soul dualism
concept.: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 let
themselves to be caught and killed. The ecological aspect of
shamanistic practice (and the related beliefs) has already been
mentioned above in the article.:can be cured by obtaining the soul
of the expected child to be born.
Spirits
The beliefs related to spirits can explain many
phenomena too, for example, the importance of storytelling, or acting as
a singer, can be understood better if we examine the whole belief
system: a person who is able to memorize long texts or songs (and
play an instrument) may be regarded as having achieved this ability
through contact with the spirits (for example among Khanty
people).
Knowledge
As mentioned, a (debated) approach explains the
etymology of word “shaman” as meaning “one who knows”. Really, the
shaman is a person who is an expert in keeping together the
multiple codes through
which this complex belief system appears, and has a comprehensive
view on it in their mind with certainty of knowledge. The shaman uses
(and the audience understands) multiple codes. Shamans express meanings in
many ways: verbally, musically, artistically, and in dance.
Meanings may be manifested in objects, such as amulets.
The shaman knows the culture of their community well,
and acts accordingly. Thus, their audience knows the used symbols and meanings — that's why
shamanism can be efficient: people in the audience trust it.
There are semiotic
theoretical approaches to shamanism, and also ones that regard it
as a cognitive map, see also Juha
Pentikäinen's “grammar of mind” approach: .
Some approaches refer to hermeneutics
(“ethnohermeneutics”).
According to Vladimir Basilov and his work Chosen
By the Spirits, a shaman is to be in the utmost healthy conditions
to perform their duties to the fullest. The belief of the shaman is
most popular through the people located in Central Asia and
Kazakhstan. The traditions of the shamanism is also imbedded in the
Tadzhiks and Uzbeks regions. The shaman’s bodies are to be formed
in a strong manner, someone having a small build would be turned
away at once. Age is a requirement as well, definitely being over
the age of fifty would disqualify those that want to be involved in
serving the spirits. The shamans are always of the higher intellect
and are looked at in a different perspective, they have a way that
makes them quick on their feet and at ill will curing those in
need.
One of the most significant and relevant
qualities that separate a shaman from other spiritual leaders is
their communications with the supernatural world. As early as the
beginning of the century self-hypnosis was very highly thought of
by those who worship. Another characteristic of the shaman is the
talent to locate objects and discover thieves, shocking those of
their tribe and those others also around to witness. The belief in
the spirits or the supernatural is what attracts those to believe
in the shamans. Those who have ill children or are in failing
health of their own is what draws them to the shaman spiritual
healings. Although the shamans are still in existence, the
population is surely declining.
Career
Initiation and learning
In the world's shamanic cultures, the shaman plays a priest-like role; however, there is an essential difference between the two, as Joseph Campbell describes:- "The priest is the socially initiated, ceremonially inducted member of a recognized religious organization, where he holds a certain rank and functions as the tenant of an office that was held by others before him, while the shaman is one who, as a consequence of a personal psychological crisis, has gained a certain power of his own." (1969, p. 231)
A shaman may be initiated via a serious illness,
by being struck by lightning and dreaming of thunder to become a
Heyoka, or
by a near-death
experience (e.g., the shaman Black Elk), or
one might follow a "calling" to become a shaman. There is usually a
set of cultural imagery
expected to be experienced during shamanic initiation regardless of the
method of induction. According to Mircea
Eliade, such imagery often includes being transported to the
spirit world and interacting with beings inhabiting the distant
world of spirits, meeting
a spiritual guide, being devoured by some being and emerging
transformed, and/or being "dismantled" and "reassembled" again,
often with implanted amulets such as magical crystals. The imagery of
initiation generally speaks of transformation and the granting
powers to transcend death
and rebirth.
In some societies shamanic powers are considered
to be inherited, whereas in other places of the world shamans are
considered to have been "called" and require lengthy training.
Among the Siberian Chukchis one may
behave in ways that "Western" bio-medical
clinicians would perhaps characterize as psychotic, but which
Siberian peoples may interpret as possession by a spirit who
demands that one assume the shamanic vocation. Among the South
American Tapirape shamans
are called in their dreams. In other societies
shamans choose their career. In North America, First Nations
peoples would seek communion with spirits through a "vision
quest"; whereas South American Shuar, seeking the
power to defend their family against enemies, apprentice themselves
to accomplished shamans. Similarly the Urarina of Peruvian
Amazonia
have an elaborate cosmological system predicated on the ritual consumption of ayahuasca. Coupled with
millenarian impulses, Urarina ayahuasca shamanism is a key
feature of this poorly documented society.
Putatively customary shamanic "traditions" can
also be noted among indigenous
Kuna peoples
of Panama,
who rely on shamanic powers and sacred talismans to heal.
As such, they enjoy a popular position among local peoples.
Note: Some feel that the Lakota tradition
(which includes the Heyoka and Black Elk, mentioned above) are not
really shamanic. There is a big difference between the Lakota
culture and shamanic cultures. In many South American shamanic
cultures there is the use of psycho-active substances (peyote, fly
agaric, psilocybin, etc.) In the Lakota culture pain is often used
instead of psychoactive plants. While a Siberian shaman would use
fly agaric, a Lakota medicine man would do a sun dance. The Lakota
medicine people have some bias against the use of psychoactive
plants. The majority of shamanic cultures use repetitive sound to
enter the shamanic state versus the use of psycho-active plants or
pain.
Shamanic illness
Shamanic illness, also called shamanistic inititatory crisis, is a psycho-spiritual crisis, usually involuntary, or a rite of passage, observed among those becoming shamans. The episode often marks the beginning of a time-limited episode of confusion or disturbing behavior where the shamanic initiate might sing or dance in an unconventional fashion, or have an experience of being "disturbed by spirits". The symptoms are usually not considered to be signs of mental illness by interpreters in the shamanic culture; rather, they are interpreted as introductory signposts for the individual who is meant to take the office of shaman (Lukoff et.al, 1992). Similarities of some shamanic illness symptoms to the kundalini process have been often noted http://www.kundalini-teacher.com/awakening/shamn.html. The significant role of initiatory illnesses in the calling of a shaman can be found in the detailed case history of Chuonnasuan, the last master shaman among the Tungus peoples in Northeast China.Practice
Underlying beliefs of practice
The shaman plays the role of healer in shamanic
societies; shamans gain knowledge and power by traversing the
axis
mundi and bringing back knowledge from the heavens. Even in
western society, this ancient practice of healing is referenced by
the use of the caduceus
as the symbol of medicine. Often the shaman has, or acquires, one
or more familiar helping entities in the spirit world; these are
often spirits in animal form, spirits of healing plants, or
(sometimes) those of departed shamans. In many shamanic societies,
magic, magical force,
and knowledge are all denoted by one word, such as the Quechua term
"yachay".
While the causes of disease are considered to lie
in the spiritual realm, being effected by malicious spirits or
witchcraft, both
spiritual and physical methods are used to heal. Commonly, a shaman
will "enter the body" of the patient to confront the spirit making
the patient sick, and heal the patient by banishing the infectious
spirit. Many shamans have expert knowledge of the plant life in
their area, and an herbal regimen is often prescribed as treatment.
In many places shamans claim to learn directly from the plants, and
to be capable of harnessing their effects and healing properties
only after obtaining permission from its abiding or patron spirit.
In South America, individual spirits are summoned by the singing of
songs called icaros;
before a spirit can be summoned the spirit must teach the shaman
its song. The use of totem
items such as rocks is common; these items are believed to have
special powers and an animating spirit. Such practices are
presumably very ancient; in about 368 BCE, Plato wrote in the
Phaedrus
that the "first prophecies were the words of an oak", and that
everyone 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".
The belief in witchcraft and sorcery, known as
brujeria in South
America, is prevalent in many shamanic societies. Some societies
distinguish shamans who cure from sorcerers who harm; others
believe that all shamans have the power to both cure and kill; that
is, shamans are in some societies also thought of as being capable
of harm. The shaman usually enjoys great power and prestige in the
community, and is renowned for their powers and knowledge; but they
may also be suspected of harming others and thus feared.
By engaging in this work, the shaman exposes
himself to significant personal risk, from the spirit world, from
any enemy shamans, as well as from the means employed to alter his
state of consciousness. Certain of the plant materials used can be
fatal, and the failure to return from an out-of-body journey can
lead to physical death. Spells are commonly used to protect against
these dangers, and the use of more dangerous plants is usually very
highly ritualized.
Methods
Generally, the shaman traverses the axis mundi and
enters the spirit world by effecting a transition of consciousness,
entering into an ecstatic
trance, either autohypnotically
or through the use of entheogens. The methods
employed are diverse, and are often used together. Some of the
methods for effecting such trances:
- Tobacco (improves concentration, but is not psychotrophic)
- Drumming
- Dancing
- Singing
- Listening to music
- Icaros / Medicine Songs
- Vigils
- Fasting
- Sweat lodge
- Vision quests
- Mariri
- Swordfighting / Bladesmithing
- "Power" or "master" plants used as incense or consumed to heal
or attain altered states (please do very thorough research before
using them, and always consider using it with guidance from an
experienced person):
- Psychedelic mushrooms - alluded to euphemistically as holy children by Mazatec shamans such as María Sabina.
- Cannabis
- San Pedro cactus - named after (St. Peter), guardian and holding the keys to the gates of heaven, by the Andean peoples; Quechua name: Huachuma
- Peyote
- Ayahuasca - Quechua for Vine of the Dead; also called yage
- Cedar
- Datura
- Deadly nightshade
- Fly agaric
- Iboga
- Morning glory
- Sweetgrass
- Sage
- Salvia divinorum - sometimes called Diviners' sage''
Shamans will often observe dietary or customary
restrictions particular to their tradition. Sometimes these
restrictions are more than just cultural. For example, the diet
followed by shamans and apprentices prior to participating in an
Ayahuasca
ceremony includes foods rich in tryptophan (a biosynthetic
precursor to serotonin) as well as avoiding
foods rich in tyramine,
which could induce hypertensive
crisis if ingested with MAOIs such as are
found in Ayahuasca brews.
Music, songs
Just like shamanism itself,Of course,
in several cultures, imitation of natural sounds may serve
other functions, not necessarily related to shamanism: practical
goals as luring game in the hunt; or entertainment (katajjaqs of Inuit).
Paraphernalia
As mentioned above, cultures termed as
shaministic can be very different. Thus, shamans may have various
kinds of paraphernalia.
Drum
Drum is used by shamans of several peoples in Siberia; same holds for many Eskimo groups, although its usage for shamanistic seances may be lacking among the Inuit of Canada.The beating of the drum allows the shaman to achieve an altered
state of consciousness or to travel on a journey. The drum is for example referred to as,
“‘horse’ or ‘rainbow-bridge’ between the physical and spiritual
worlds”. The journey mentioned is one in which the shaman establishes a connection
with one or two of the spirit worlds. With the beating of the
drum come
neurophysiological effects. Much fascination surround the role that
the acoustics of the drum
play to the shaman.
There are two different worlds, the upper and the
lower. In the upper world, images such as “climbing a mountain,
tree, cliff, rainbow, or ladder; ascending into the sky on smoke;
flying on an animal, carpet, or broom and meeting a teacher or
guide”,are typically seen. The lower world consists of images
including, “entering into the earth through a cave, hollow tree
stump, a water hole, a tunnel, or a tube”. By being able to
interact with a different world at an altered and aware state, the
Shaman can
then exchange information between the world in which he lives and
that in which he has traveled to.
Eagle Feather
These feathers have been seen used as a kind of spiritual scalpel.http://www.amazon.com/dp/038528859X One example of such use would be Rolling Thunder, an inter-tribal medicine-man/shaman.Rattle
Found mostly among South American and African peoples. Also used in ceremonies among the Navajo and in traditional ways in their blessings and ceremonies.Gong
Often found through South East Asia, Far Eastern peoples.Didgeridoo & Clap Stick
Found mainly among the various aboriginal peoples of Australia.Gender and sexuality
While some cultures have had higher numbers of
male shamans, others such as native Korean cultures have had a
preference for females. Recent archaeological evidence
suggests that the earliest known shamans—dating to the Upper
Paleolithic era in what is now the Czech
Republic—were women.
In some societies, shamans exhibit a two-spirit
identity, assuming the dress, attributes, role or function of the
opposite sex, gender fluidity and/or same-sex sexual orientation.
This practice is common, and found among the Chukchi,
Sea
Dyak, Patagonians,
Araucanians,
Arapaho,
Cheyenne,
Navajo,
Pawnee,
Lakota, and
Ute, as
well as many other Native American tribes. Indeed, these two
spirited shamans were so widespread as to suggest a very ancient
origin of the practice. See, for example, Joseph
Campbell's map in his
The Historical Atlas of World Mythology: [Vol I: The Way of the
Animal Powers: Part 2: pg 174] Such two-spirit shamans are thought
to be especially powerful, and Shamanism so important to ancestral
populations that it may have contributed to the maintenance of
genes for transgendered individuals in breeding populations over
evolutionary time through the mechanism of "kin
selection." [see final chapter of E.O. Wilson's "Sociobiology:
The New Synthesis] They are highly respected and sought out in
their tribes, as they will bring high status to their mates.
Duality and bisexuality are also found in the
shamans of the Dogon people of
Mali (Africa).
References to this can be found in several works of Malidoma
Somé, a writer who was born and initiated there.
Position
In some cultures, the border between the shaman
and the lay person is not sharp: The difference is that the shaman
knows more myths and
understands their meaning better, but the majority of adult men
knows many myths, too.
Similar can be observed among some Eskimo peoples. Many
laic people have felt experiences that are usually attributed to
the
shamans of those Eskimo groups: experiencing daydreaming, reverie, trance is not restricted to
shamans. In Greenland among some Inuit, there are laic
people who may have the capability to have closer relationships
with beings of the belief system than others. These people are
apprentice shamans who failed to accomplish their learning
process.
The assistant of an Oroqen shaman
(called jardalanin, i.e. "second spirit") knows many things about
the associated beliefs: he/she accompanies the rituals, interprets
the behavior of the shaman. Despite of this, the jardalanin is not
a shaman. For his/her interpretative, accompanying role, it would
be even unwelcome to fall into trance.
The way shamans get sustenance and take part in
everyday life varies among cultures. In many Eskimo groups, they
provide services for the community and get a “due payment” (some
cultures believe the payment is given to the helping spirits
History
Hypotheses on origins
Shamanistic practices are sometimes claimed to
predate all organized religions, dating back to the Paleolithic ,
and certainly to the Neolithic period
.
Historical times
Aspects of shamanism are encountered in later,
organized religions, generally in their mystic and symbolic
practices. Greek paganism was influenced by shamanism, as reflected
in the stories of Tantalus, Prometheus,
Medea, and
Calypso
among others, as well as in the Eleusinian
Mysteries, and other mysteries. Some of the shamanic practices
of the Greek religion later merged into the Roman religion.
The shamanic practices of many cultures were
marginalized with the spread of monotheism in Europe and the
Middle
East. In Europe, starting
around 400, institutional Christianity was instrumental in the
collapse of the Greek and Roman religions. Temples were
systematically destroyed and key ceremonies were outlawed or
appropriated. The Early Modern witch trials
may have further eliminated lingering remnants of European
shamanism (if in fact "shamanism" can even be used to accurately
describe the beliefs and practices of those cultures).
The repression of shamanism continued as Catholic
influence spread with Spanish colonization. In the
Caribbean,
and Central
and South
America, Catholic priests followed in the footsteps of the
Conquistadors
and were instrumental in the destruction of the local traditions,
denouncing practitioners as "devil worshippers" and having them
executed. In North America, the English
Puritans
conducted periodic campaigns against individuals perceived as
witches. As recently as the nineteen seventies, historic petroglyphs were being
defaced by missionaries in the Amazon. A
similarly destructive story can be told of the encounter between
Buddhists
and shamans, e.g., in Mongolia (See
Caroline Humphrey with Urgunge Onon, 1996).
Decline and revitalization / tradition-preserving movements
In many areas, former shamans ceased to fill the
functions in the community they used to, as they felt mocked by
their own community, or regarded their own past as a deprecated
thing, sometimes even unwilling to talk about it to an
ethnographer. Moreover, besides personal communications of former
shamans, even some folklore texts narrate directly about a
deterioration process: a Buryat epic text
laments that shamans of older times were stronger, possessing
capabilities like omnividence, fortune-telling even for decades in
the future, moving as fast as bullet; the texts contrast them to
the recent heartless, unknowing, greedy shamans.
As for reality, in most affected areas,
shamanistic practices ceased to exist, with authentic shamans died
and their personal experiences following. 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 motifs related to
the local shamanhood (laics know myths as well, among Barasana,
even though less; thus, these are lost with his/her death. Besides
of this, in many cultures, the entire traditional belief system has
become endangered (often together with a partial or total language
shift), the other people of the community remembering the
associated beliefs and practices (or the language at all) became
old or died, many folklore memories (songs, texts) went forgotten —
this may threaten even such peoples which could preserve their
isolation until the middle of the 20th centrury, like the Nganasan.
Some areas could enjoy a prolonged resistance due
to their remoteness.
- Variants of shamanism among Eskimo peoples were once a widespread (and very diverse) phenomenon, but today are rarely practiced, and they were already in the decline among many groups even in the times when the first major ethnological researches were done, e.g. among Polar Eskimos, in the end of 19th century, Sagloq died, the last shaman who was believed to be able to travel to the sky and under the sea — and many other former shamanic capacities were lost in that time as well, like ventriloquism and sleight-of-hand.
- The isolated location of Nganasan people allowed shamanism to be a living phenomenon among them even in the beginning of 20th century, the last notable Nganasan shaman's séances could be recorded on film in the 1970s.
After exemplifying the general decline even in
the most remote areas, let us mention that there are some
revitalization or tradition-preserving efforts as a response.
Besides collecting the memories, there are also some
tradition-preserving and even revitalization efforts, sometimes
lead by authentic former shamans (for example among Cherokeehttp://www.nanish.org/Pages/MetaTantay.html,
Sakha
people and Tuvans Admittedly,
several traditional beliefs systems indeed have ecological
considerations (for example, many Eskimo peoples), and among
Tukano
people, the shaman indeed has directly resource-protecting
roles, see details in section Ecological
aspect.
Today, shamanism survives primarily among
indigenous
peoples. Shamanic practices continue today in the tundras,
jungles, deserts, and other rural areas, and even in cities, towns,
suburbs, and shantytowns all over the world. This is especially
true for Africa and South America, where "mestizo shamanism" is
widespread.
Areal variations
Europe
While shamanism had a strong tradition in Europe before the rise of monotheism, shamanism remains as a traditional, organized religion in Uralic , Altaic people and Huns; and also in Mari-El and Udmurtia, two semi-autonomous provinces of Russia with large Finno-Ugric minority populations. It was widespread in Europe during the Stone Age, and continued to be practiced throughout the Iron Age by the various Teutonic tribes and the Fino-Baltic peoples.See also Sami shamanism,
Finnish
mythology , Astuvansalmi rock
paintings, Huns , Tengri and the
appropriate parts of Shamanism
in Siberia.
Some peoples, which used to live in Siberia, have
wandered to their present locations since then. For example, many
Uralic peoples live now outside Siberia. The original location of
the Proto-Uralic
peoples (and its extent) is debated. Combined phytogeographical
and linguistic considerations (distribution of various tree species
and the presence of their names in various Uralic languages)
suggest that this area was north of Central Ural
Mountains and on lower and middle parts of Ob River. The
ancestors of Hungarian
people or Magyars have wandered from their ancestral
proto-Uralic area to the Pannonian
Basin. Shamanism is no more a living practice among Hungarians,
but some remnants have been reserved as fragments of folklore, in
folktales, customs. See
shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folklore.
Tuva is the only
region in the world to have shamanism as an official
religion.
Asia
Siberia
Siberia is regarded as the locus classicus of shamanism. It is inhabited by many different ethnic groups. Many of its Uralic, Altaic, and Paleosiberian peoples observe shamanistic practices even in modern times. Many classical ethnographic sources of “shamanism” were recorded among Siberian peoples.Among several Samoyedic
peoples shamanism was a living tradition also in modern times,
especially at groups living in isolation until recent times
(Nganasans).
The last notable Nganasan shaman's seances could be recorded on
film in the 1970s.
When the People's Republic of China was formed in
1949 and the border with Russian Siberia was formally sealed, many
nomadic Tungus groups that practiced shamanism were confined in
Manchuria and Inner Mongolia. These include the Ewenki and the
Oroqen. The
last shaman of the Oroqen, Chuonnasuan (Meng Jin Fu), died in
October 2000.
In many other cases, shamanism was in decline
even at the beginning of 20th century (Selkups).
Korea
Shamanism is still practiced in South Korea, where the role of a shaman is most frequently taken by women known as mudangs, while male shamans (rare)are called baksoo mudangs. Korean shamans are considered to be from a low class.A person can become a shaman through hereditary
title or through natural ability. Shamans are consulted in
contemporary society for financial and marital decisions.
The Korean shamans' use of the Amanita
Muscaria .. in traditional practice is thought to have been
suppressed as early as the Choseon
dynasty. Another mushroom of the Russula genus was
renamed as the Shaman's mushroom, "Mu-dang-beo-seot무당버섯". Korean
shamans are also reputed to use spiders over the subject's skin.
Colorful robes, dancing, drums and ritual weapons are also
features.
Other Asian areas
There is a strong shamanistic influence in the
Bön
religion of some Central
Asians, and in Tibetan
Buddhism. Buddhism became popular with shamanic peoples such as
the Tibetans, Mongols, and
Manchu
beginning in the eighth century. Forms of shamanistic ritual
combined with Tibetan
Buddhism became institutionalized as the state religion under
the Mongolian Yuan dynasty
and the Manchurian Qing
dynasty. However, in the shamanic cultures still practiced by
various ethnic groups in areas such as Nepal and northern
India,
shamans are not necessarily considered enlightened, and often are
even feared for their ability to use their power to carry out
malicious intent.
In Tibet, the Nyingma schools in particular, had
a Tantric tradition that had married "priests" known as Ngakpas or
Ngakmas/mos (fem.). The Ngakpas were often employed or commissioned
to rid the villages of demons or disease, creations of protective
amulets, the carrying out of religious rites etc. The Ngakpas
should however, been grounded in Buddhist philosophy and not simply
another form of shaman, but sadly, this was most often not the
case. There have always been, however, highly realised and
accomplished ngakpas. They were in their own right great lamas who
were of equal status as lamas with monastic backgrounds. The
monasteries, as in many conventional religious institutions, wished
to preserve their own traditions, sometimes at the expense of
others. The monasteries depended upon the excesses of patrons for
support. This situation often led to a clash between the more
grassroots and shamanic character of the travelling Chödpa and
Ngakpa
culture and the more conservative religious monastic system.
Shamanism is still widely practiced in the
Ryukyu
Islands (Okinawa), where
shamans are known as 'Nuru' (all women) and 'Yuta'. 'Nuru'
generally administrates public or communal ceremonies while 'Yuta'
focuses on the civil or private matters. Shamanism is also
practiced in a few rural areas in Japan proper. It is commonly
believed that the Shinto religion is
the result of the transformation of a shamanistic tradition into a
religion.
Shamanistic practices also seem to have been
preserved in the Catholic religious traditions of aborigenes in
Taiwan
Eskimo cultures
Eskimo groups comprise a huge area stretching from Eastern Siberia through Alaska and Northern Canada (including Labrador Peninsula) to Greenland. Shamanistic practice and beliefs have been recorded at several parts of this vast area crosscutting continental borders. but sometimes it is regarded as belonging to the Yupik languages.) [[Aleut language#Comparison to Eskimo grammar|The languages of the Eskimo branch have certain common characteristics (compared to Aleut) which justifies "splitting off" the Eskimo branch inside the Eskimo-Aleut family]].Shamanistic features
When speaking of “shamanism” in various Eskimo groups, we must remember that (as mentioned above) the term “shamanism” can cover certain characteristics of various different cultures. Mediation is regarded often as an important aspect of shamanism in general. Also in most Eskimo groups, the role of mediator is known well: the person filling it in is actually believed to be able to contact the beings who populate the belief system. Term “shaman” is used in several English-language publications also in relation to Eskimos. Also the /aˈliɣnalʁi/ of the Asian Eskimos is translated as “shaman” in the Russian and English The soul concepts of several groups are specific examples of soul dualism (showing variability in details in the various cultures).Like most cultures labelled as “shamanistic”, the
Eskimo groups have several special features, or at least ones that
are not present in all shamanistic cultures. Unlike in many
Siberian cultures, the careers of most Eskimo shamans lack the
motivation of force: becoming a shaman is usually a result of
deliberate consideration, not a necessity forced by the
spirits.
Diversity, with some similarities
Another possible concern: do the belief systems
of various Eskimo groups have such common features at all, that
would justify any mentioning them together? There was no political
structure above the groups, their languages were relative, but
differed more or less, often forming language
continuums (online).
There are some similarities in the cultures of
the Eskimo groups together with diversity, far from
homogeneity.
The Russian linguist Меновщиков, an expert of
Siberian
Yupik and Sireniki
Eskimo languages (while admitting that he is not a specialist
in ethnology) mentions, that the shamanistic seances of those
Siberian
Yupik and Sireniki
groups he has seen have many similarities to those of Greenland
Inuit groups described by Fridtjof
Nansen, although a large distance separates Siberia and
Greenland. There may be certain similarities also in Asiatic groups
with some North American ones. Also the usage of a specific
shaman's language is documented among several Eskimo groups, used
mostly for talking to spirits. Also the Ungazigmit (belonging to
Siberian
Yupiks) had a special allegoric usage of
some expressions.
The local cultures showed great diversity. The
myths concerning the role of shaman had several variants, and also
the name of their protagonists varied from culture to culture. For
example, a mythological figure, usually referred to in the
literature by the collective term Sea
Woman, has factually many local names: Nerrivik “meat dish”
among Polar Inuit, Nuliayuk “lubricous” among Netsilingmiut,
Sedna “the nether one” among Baffin Land Inuit. Also the soul
conceptions, e.g. the details of the soul dualism
showed great variability, ranging from guardianship to a kind of
reincarnation.
Conceptions of spirits or other beings had also many variants (see
e.g. the tupilaq
concept).
Africa
See also African traditional religion.In the early 19th century traditional healers in
parts of Africa were often referred to in a derogatory manner as
"witch
doctors" practising Juju by early European
settlers and explorers.The San or Bushmen ancestors who were
primarily scattered in Southern Africa before the 19th century, are
reported to have practiced a practice similar to shamanism. In
areas in Eastern Free State and Lesotho, where they co-existed with
the early Sotho tribes, local folklore describes them to have lived
in caves where they drew pictures on cave walls during a trance and
were also reputed to be good rain makers.
Americas
Native American and First
Nations cultures have diverse religious beliefs. There was
never one universal Native American religion or spiritual system.
Though many Native American cultures have traditional healers,
ritualists, singers, mystics,
lore-keepers and "Medicine People", none of them ever used, or use,
the term "shaman" to describe these religious leaders. Rather, like
other indigenous cultures the world over, their spiritual
functionaries are described by words in their own languages, and in
many cases are not taught to outsiders.
Many of these indigenous religions have been
grossly misrepresented by outside observers and anthropologists,
even to the extent of superficial or seriously mistaken
anthropological accounts being taken as more authentic than the
accounts of actual members of the cultures and religions in
question. Often these accounts suffer from "Noble
Savage"-type romanticism and racism. Some contribute to the
fallacy that Native American cultures and religions are something
that only existed in the past, and which can be mined for data
despite the opinions of Native communities.
Not all Indigenous communities have roles for
specific individuals who mediate with the spirit world on behalf of
the community. Among those that do have this sort of religious
structure, spiritual methods and beliefs may have some
commonalities, though many of these commonalities are due to some
nations being closely-related, from the same region, or through
post-Colonial governmental policies leading to the combining of
formerly-independent nations on reservations. This can sometimes
lead to the impression that there is more unity among belief
systems than there was in antiquity.
Navajo
medicine men, known as "Hatałii",
use several methods to diagnose the patient's ailments. These may
include using special tools such as crystal rocks, and abilities
such as hand-trembling and trances, sometimes accompanied by
chanting. The Hatałii will select a specific healing chant for that
type of ailment. Navajo healers must be able to correctly perform a
healing ceremony from beginning to end. If they don't, the ceremony
will not work. Training a Hatałii to perform ceremonies is
extensive, arduous, and takes many years, and is not unlike
priesthood. The apprentice learns everything by watching his
teacher, and memorizes the words to all the chants. Many times, a
medicine man cannot learn all sixty of the traditional ceremonies,
so he will opt to specialize in a select few.
Santo Daime
is a syncretic religion with elements of shamanism.
Mayan
In the Peruvian Amazon Basin
and north coastal regions of the country, the healer shamans are
known as curanderos.
In addition to Peruvian shaman’s
(curanderos) use of rattles, and their ritualized
ingestion of mescaline-bearing San Pedro
cactuses (Trichocereus pachanoi) for the divinization and diagnosis
of sorcery,
north-coastal shamans are famous throughout the region for their
intricately complex and symbolically dense healing altars called mesas (tables).
Sharon (1993) has argued that the mesas symbolize the dualistic
ideology underpinning the practice and experience of north-coastal
shamanism. For Sharon, the mesas are the, "physical embodiment of
the supernatural opposition between benevolent and malevolent
energies” (Dean 1998:61).
In the Amazon
Rainforest, at several Indian groups the shaman acts also as a
manager of scare ecological resources (paper; online even in the
last decades of the 20th century.
The yaskomo of the Waiwai is
believed to be able to perform a soul flight.
The soul flight can serve several functions:
- healing
- flying to the sky to consult cosmological beings (the moon or the brother of the moon) to get a name for a new-born baby
- flying to the cave of peccaries' mountains to ask the father of peccaries for abundance of game
- flying deep down in a river, to achieve the help of other beings.
Among literature on South American tropical
forest shamanism are :-
- "Shamans, Prophets, Priests, and Pastors."
- In Darkness and Secrecy. (northern)
- In Darkness and Secrecy. (southern)
Mapuche
Among the Mapuche people of South America, the community "shaman", usually a woman, is known as the Machi, and serves the community by performing ceremonies to cure diseases, ward off evil, influence the weather and harvest, and by practicing other forms of healing such as herbalism.Fuegians
Although Fuegians (the indigenous peoples of Tierra del Fuego) were all hunter-gatherers, they did not share a common culture. The material culture was not homogenous, either: the big island and the archipelago made two different adaptations possible. Some of the cultures were coast-dwelling, others were land-oriented.Both Selk'nam and
Yámana
had persons filling in shaman-like roles. The Selk'nams
believed their /xon/s to have
supernatural capabilities, e.g. to control weather. The figure of
/xon/ appeared in myths, too. The Yámana
/jekamuʃ/ corresponds to the Selknam
/xon/.
In Australia various
aboriginal groups refer to their "shamans" as "clever men" and
"clever women" also as kadji. These Aboriginal shamans use maban or mabain, the material that
is believed to give them their purported magical powers. Besides
healing, contact with spiritual beings, involvement in initiation
and other secret ceremonies, they are also enforcers of tribal
laws, keepers of special knowledge and may "hex" to death one who
breaks a social taboo by singing a song only known to the "clever
men".
Criticism of the term “shaman” or “shamanism”
Certain anthropologists, most notably Alice Kehoe in her book Shamans and Religion: An Anthropological Exploration in Critical Thinking, are highly critical of the term. Part of this criticism involves the notion of cultural appropriation. This includes criticism of New Age and modern Western forms of Shamanism, which may not only misrepresent or 'dilute' genuine indigenous practices but do so in a way that, according to Kehoe, reinforces racist ideas such as the Noble Savage.Kehoe is highly critical of Mircea
Eliade's work. Eliade, being a philosopher and historian of
religions rather than an anthropologist, had never done any field
work or made any direct contact with 'shamans' or cultures
practicing 'shamanism', though he did spend four years studying at
the University of Calcutta in India where he received his doctorate
based on his Yoga thesis and was acquainted with Mahatma Gandhi.
According to Kehoe, Eliade's 'shamanism' is an invention
synthesized from various sources unsupported by more direct
research. To Kehoe, what some scholars of shamanism treat as being
definitive of shamanism, most notably drumming, trance, chanting,
entheogens and
hallucinogenics, spirit communication and healing, are practices
that
- exist outside of what is defined as shamanism and play similar roles even in non-shamanic cultures (such as the role of chanting in Judeo-Christian rituals)
- in their expression are unique to each culture that uses them and cannot be generalized easily, accurately or usefully into a global ‘religion’ such as shamanism.
Mihály
Hoppál also discusses whether the term “shamanism” is
appropriate. He recommends using the term “shamanhood” for
stressing the diversity and the specific features of the discussed
cultures. This is a term used in old Russian and German
ethnographic reports at the beginning of the 20th century. He
believes that this term is less general and places more stress on
the local variations, and it emphasizes also that shamanism is not
a religion of sacred dogmas, but linked to the everyday life in a
practical way. Following similar thoughts, he also conjectures a
contemporary paradigm shift. Also Piers
Vitebsky 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, as for the past, their existence is not
impossible).
See books and small online materials on this
topic.
Shamanism and New Age movement
The New Age movement
has appropriated
some ideas from shamanism as well as beliefs and practices from
Eastern religions and
Native American cultures. As with other such appropriations,
the original practitioners of these traditions frequently condemn
New Age use as misunderstood, sensationalized, or superficially
understood and/or applied.http://www.aics.org/war.html
Some Nanai
shamans experienced performances on the stage as dangerous:
inappropriate (untimely, superfluous) invocation of the helping
spirits can raise their anger.
There is an endeavor in some occult and esoteric circles to reinvent
shamanism in a modern form, drawing from core
shamanism - a set of beliefs and practices synthesized by the
controversial Michael
Harner - often revolving around the use of ritual drumming and
dance, and Harner's interpretations of various indigenous
religions. Harner has faced much criticism for implying that pieces
of diverse religions can be taken out of context to form some sort
of "universal" shamanic tradition. Some of these neoshamans also
focus on the ritual use of entheogens, as well as
chaos
magic. Allegedly, European-based
Neoshamanic traditions are focused upon the researched or imagined
traditions of ancient Europe, where they
believe many mystical practices and belief systems were suppressed
by the Christian church. Some of these practitioners express a
desire to practice a system that is based upon their own ancestral
traditions. Some anthropologists and practitioners have discussed
the impact of such "neoshamanism" as 'giving extra pay' (Harvey,
1997 and elsewhere) to indigenous American traditions, particularly
as many Pagan- or Heathen-'shamanic practitioners' of legitimate
cultural traditions do not call themselves shamans, but instead use
specific names derived from the older European traditions - the
völva or
seidkona (seid-woman) of
the sagas being an example (see Blain 2002, Wallis 2003). Shamanism
has also been used in New Age therapies which use enactment and
association with other realities as an intervention http://www.ull.es/congresos/conmirel/YORK.htmlhttp://nlpuniversitypress.com/html/CaCom08.html
(see also Plastic
shaman)
See also
- Astral spirits
- Animism
- Ayahuasca
- Core Shamanism
- Entheogen
- Inuit
- Mana
- Machi (Shaman)
- Neoshamanism
- Neuroanthropology
- Neurotheology
- New Age
- Ovoo
- Paganism
- Peyote
- Plastic shaman
- Power Animal
- Prehistoric medicine
- Psychopomp
- Sacred Hoop Magazine
- Shaman's Drum Journal
- Shintō
- soul catcher
- Taoic religion
- Technoshamanism
- Thoughtform
- Yatiri
Notes
References
Latin
- Eskimo Märchen The title means: “Eskimo tales”, the series means: “The tales of world literature”.
- A kultúra arcai. Mozaikok a kulturális antropológia köreiből The title means “The faces of culture. Mosaics fom the area of cultural anthropology”.
- Shamanism in Siberia. Aboriginal Siberia. A study in social anthropology
- http://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/inuit.htm
- Sámánok nyomában Szibéria földjén. Egy néprajzi kutatóút története ">http://mek.oszk.hu/02100/02181/index.phtml}} The book has been translated to English: Tracing shamans in Siberia. The story of an ethnographical research expedition
- Samanizmus The title means: “Shamanism”.
- A sámánhit emlékei a magyar népi műveltségben The title means: “Remnants of shamanistic beliefs in Hungarian folklore”.
- Boundaries and Passages: Rule and Ritual in Yup'ik Eskimo Oral Tradition
- Waiwai. Religion and society of an Amazonian tribe
- Book of the Eskimos
- Nordwind—Südwind. Mythen und Märchen der Feuerlandindianer. The title means: “Northern wind, southern wind. Myths and tales of Fuegians”.
- Uráli népek. Nyelvrokonaink kultúrája és hagyományai The title means: “Uralic peoples. Culture and traditions of our linguistic relatives”; the chapter means “Linguistical background of the relationship”.
- Sámánok, lelkek és jelképek The title means “Shamans, souls and symbols”.
- Folklór és közösség The title means “The belief system of Hungarians when they entered the Pannonian Basin, and their shamanism”.
- Sámánok Eurázsiában 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).
- Sámánok és kultúrák The chapter title means “Shamans, cultures and researchers in the millenary”, the book title means “Shamans and cultures”.
- Sámánok és kultúrák The chapter title means “Shamanhood among the Nenets”, the book title means “Shamans and cultures”.
- Macht Musik. Musik als Glück und Nutzen für das Leben ">http://www.deutschesfachbuch.de/info/detail.php?isbn=3879098654}}
- From the Milk River: Spatial and Temporal Processes in Northwest Amazonia
- The Palm and the Pleiades. Initiation and Cosmology in Northwest Amazonia
- Eskimos: Greenland and Canada
- Lawlor, Robert (1991). Voices Of The First Day: Awakening in the Aboriginal dreamtime. Rochester, Vermont: Inner Traditions International, Ltd. ISBN 0-89281-355-5
- Popular beliefs and folklore tradition in Siberia
- Becoming Half Hidden: Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit
- Finnugor kalauz The chapter means “Northern Samoyedic peoples”, the title means Finno-Ugric guide.
- Inuit Games and Songs • Chants et Jeux des Inuit . The songs are online available from the ethnopoetics website curated by Jerome Rothenberg.
- It describes the life of Chuonnasuan, the last shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China.
- Rainforest Shamans: Essays on the Tukano Indians of the Northwest Amazon
- A sámán Translation of the original: The Shaman (Living Wisdom)
- A varázsdob és a látó asszonyok. Lapp népmesék The title means: “The magic drum and the clairvoyant women. Sami folktales”, the series means: “Tales of folks”.
- Világnak kezdetétől fogva. Történeti folklorisztikai tanulmányok The chapter discusses the etymology and meaning of word “shaman”.
Cyrillic
- Материалы по языку и фольклору эскимосов (чаплинский диалект) Rendering in English: Materials on the Language and Folklore of the Eskimoes (Vol. I, Chaplino Dialect)
Further reading
- Joseph Campbell, The Masks of God: Primitive Mythology. 1959; reprint, New York and London: Penguin Books, 1976. ISBN 0-14-019443-6
- Richard de Mille, ed. The Don Juan Papers: Further Castaneda Controversies. Santa Barbara, CA: Ross-Erikson, 1980.
- George Devereux, "Shamans as Neurotics", American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 63, No. 5, Part 1. (Oct., 1961), pp. 1088-1090.
- Nevill Drury, The Shaman and the Magician: Journeys Between the Worlds, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1982. ISBN 0-7100-0910-0
- Mircea Eliade, Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy. 1964; reprint, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-691-11942-2
- Jay Courtney Fikes, Carlos Castaneda: Academic Opportunism and the Psychedelic Sixties, Millennia Press, Canada, 1993ISBN 0-9696960-0-0
- Joan Halifax, ed. Shamanic Voices: A Survey of Visionary Narratives. 1979; reprint, New York and London: Penguin, 1991. ISBN 0-14-019348-0
- Michael Harner: The Way of the Shaman. 1980, new edition, HarperSanFrancisco, 1990, ISBN 0-06-250373-1
- Graham Harvey, ed. Shamanism: A Reader. New York and London: Routledge, 2003. ISBN 0-415-25330-6.
- 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 0-19-516115-7
- Alice Kehoe, Shamans and Religion: An Anthropoligical Exploration in Critical Thinking. 2000. London: Waveland Press. ISBN 1-57766-162-1
- Jeremy Narby and Francis Huxley, eds. Shamans Through Time: 500 Years on the Path to Knowledge. 2001; reprint, New York: Tarcher, 2004. ISBN 0-500-28327-3
- Daniel C. Noel. Soul Of Shamanism: Western Fantasies, Imaginal Realities.Continuum, 1997. ISBN 0-8264-1081-2
- Åke Ohlmarks 1939: Studien zum Problem des Schamanismus. Gleerup, Lund.
- Jordan Paper. The Spirits are Drunk: Comparative Approaches to Chinese Religion, SUNY Press, 1995. ISBN 0-7914-2315-8
- John Perkins. The World Is As You Dream It: Shamanic Teachings from the Amazon and Andes. Rochester, Vt.: Park Street, 1994. ISBN 0-89281-459-4
- John Perkins. Spirit of the Shuar: Wisdom from the Last Unconquered People of the Amazon. Destiny Books, 2001. ISBN 0-89-281865-4
- Barbara Tedlock, Time and the Highland Maya,U. of New Mexico Press, 1992. ISBN 0-8263-1358-2
- Alberto Villoldo, PhD, Erik Jendresen: Dance of the Four Winds - Secrets of the Inca Medicine Wheel. Destiny Books ISBN 978-0892815142
- Piers Vitebsky, The Shaman: Voyages of the Soul - Trance, Ecstasy and Healing from Siberia to the Amazon, Duncan Baird, 2001. ISBN 1-903296-18-8
- Michael Winkelman, (2000) Shamanism: The Neural Ecology of Consciousness and Healing. Westport, CT: Bergin & Garvey.
- Andrei Znamenski, ed. Shamanism: Critical Concepts, 3 vols. London: Routledge, 2004. ISBN 0-415-31192-6
- Andrei Znamenski, Shamanism in Siberia: Russian Records of Siberian Spirituality. Dordrech and Boston: Kluwer/Springer, 2003. ISBN 1-4020-1740-5
- Andrei Znamenski, The Beauty of the Primitive: Shamanism and the Western Imagination.Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 0195172310
External links
- http://www.krupar.com/index.php?file=www/en/gallery/gallery.html&cat=5 Shamanism in Siberia
- It describes the life of Chuonnasuan, the last shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China.
- NAFPS - New Age Frauds and Plastic Shamans is a First Nations (American Indian) group devoted to alerting seekers about fraudulent teachers, and helping them avoid being exploited or participating in exploitation.
- Chinese Shamanka - Short documentary about mop-nyit ceremony in Sichuan.
- It discusses the symbolics of shamanism of Amazonian indigenous groups, and also its "ecological" functions: avoiding the depletion of scare resources.
- It considers cross cultural similarities in shamanic belief.
- Macht Musik. Musik als Glück und Nutzen für das Leben ">http://www.deutschesfachbuch.de/info/detail.php?isbn=3879098654}}
- American Indian Shamanism a full chapter from Frithjof Schuon's book Light on the Ancient Worlds: New Translation with Selected Letters.
- http://haldjas.folklore.ee/~aado/
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GbVnsS4VuDI
- http://www.youtube.com/user/ekadasarudra
shamanism in Arabic: شامانية
shamanism in Azerbaijani: Şamanizm
shamanism in Bulgarian: Шаманизъм
shamanism in Catalan: Xamanisme
shamanism in Welsh: Siamanaeth
shamanism in Danish: Shamanisme
shamanism in German: Schamanismus
shamanism in Estonian: Šamanism
shamanism in Modern Greek (1453-):
Σαμανισμός
shamanism in Spanish: Chamanismo
shamanism in Esperanto: Ŝamanismo
shamanism in Persian: شمنباوری
shamanism in French: Chamanisme
shamanism in Korean: 샤머니즘
shamanism in Indonesian: Dukun
shamanism in Italian: Sciamanesimo
shamanism in Hebrew: שמאניזם
shamanism in Lithuanian: Šamanizmas
shamanism in Hungarian: Samanizmus
shamanism in Dutch: Sjamanisme
shamanism in Japanese: シャーマニズム
shamanism in Norwegian: Sjamanisme
shamanism in Polish: Szamanizm
shamanism in Portuguese: Xamanismo
shamanism in Quechua: Paqu yachaq
shamanism in Russian: Шаманизм
shamanism in Simple English: Shaman
shamanism in Slovak: Šamanizmus
shamanism in Slovenian: Šamanizem
shamanism in Serbian: Šamanizam
shamanism in Finnish: Šamanismi
shamanism in Swedish: Schaman
shamanism in Thai: ชาแมน
shamanism in Turkish: Şamanizm
shamanism in Ukrainian: Шаман
shamanism in Contenese: 薩滿教
shamanism in Chinese: 萨满教