2005, Number 1
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Inv Salud 2005; 7 (1)
Transforming the Shaman: Changing Western Views of Shamanism and Altered States of Consciousness
Jilek WG
Language: English
References: 72
Page: 8-15
PDF size: 507.46 Kb.
ABSTRACT
This article documents the changes in the
Western notions of shamanism, the shamanic healer,
and the role of altered states of consciousness
(ASC). Before the Age of Enlightenment, the shaman
was condemned as daemoniac charlatan. From the
mid-19th until the mid-20th century, the shaman was
generally considered as afflicted with a psychiatric
or epileptic condition; a notion based on the
misinterpretation of altered states of consciousness
in shamanic rituals as psychopathological. The
pathology labeling of shamanic healers and their
rituals constitutes a eurocentric and positivistic fallacy.
The therapeutic ability of shamanic practitioners
and the psychotherapeutic efficacy of shamanic
healing rituals have now been recognized. Today
we witness the revival of shamanic ceremonials in
many indigenous populations. We can also observe
a popularization of shamanism in post-modern
Western society. The apparent transformation of the
shaman and shamanism has been determined by
significant changes in the Western zeitgeist.
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