home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: soc.religion.shamanism,sci.anthropology,alt.out-of-body,alt.dreams.lucid,soc.answers,sci.answers,alt.answers,news.answers,news.answers
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.moneng.mei.com!howland.reston.ans.net!wupost!csus.edu!netcom.com!deane
- From: deane@netcom.com (Dean Edwards)
- Subject: Shamanism-General Overview-Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Message-ID: <deaneCMvMLH.HH7@netcom.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: This FAQ contains a general overview on shamanism.
- It should be read by anyone interested in understanding the what
- is meant by shamanism and what differentiates shamanism form
- other forms of ecstatic experience
- Keywords: shaman, anthropology, ethnography, consciousness, spirit, oobe
- Sender: deane@netcom.com (Dean Edwards)
- Supersedes: <deaneCMDLz9.BAA@netcom.com>
- Reply-To: deane@netcom.com (Dean Edwards)
- Organization: La Casa del Paese Lontano
- Date: Fri, 18 Mar 1994 20:08:05 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Fri, 15 Apr 1994 23:59:59 GMT
- Lines: 231
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu soc.religion.shamanism:455 sci.anthropology:5861 alt.out-of-body:2815 alt.dreams.lucid:2159 soc.answers:981 sci.answers:988 alt.answers:2128 news.answers:16520
-
- Archive-name: shamanism/overview
- Last-modified: 18 March 1994
- Version: 1.1.1
-
-
- NOTE: The following general overview of shamanism is not intended to
- be the last word or the definitive work on this subject. Rather it is, as
- its title implies, intended to provide the participant or reader with a set
- of guidelines that will familiarize them with the general use of the terms
- shamanism, shaman and shamanic in the trends, study and practice of
- historic, traditional and contemporary shamanic experience.
- The word 'shaman comes to English from the Tungus language
- via Russian. Among the Tungus of Siberia it is both a noun and a
- verb. While the Tungus have no word for shamanism, it has
- come into usage by anthropologists, historians of religion and
- others in contemporary society to designate the experience and the
- practices of the shaman. Its usage has grown to include similar
- experiences and practices in cultures outside of the original
- Siberian cultures from which the term shaman originated. Thus
- shamanism is not the name of a religion or group of religions.
- Particular attention should be paid to the use of qualifying words
- such as "may" or "usually". They indicate examples or tendencies and
- are not, in any way, intended to represent rigid standards
- Please send comments to deane@netcom.com (Dean Edwards).
-
- Shamanism-General Overview-Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- (c November, 1993 by Dean Edwards)
- This FAQ shall be posted monthly and is maintained by Dean Edwards
- (deane@netcom.com). It is intended for the private non-commercial use
- of Usenet users. It may not be sold or resold without the permission
- of the author.
-
- Table of Contents:
-
- 1. Terms used in this FAQ
- 2. What is shamanism?
- 3. What is Shamanic Ecstasy?
- 4. Becoming a shaman
- 5. The role of trauma in the development of a shaman
- 6. The relationship between shamanic traditions and culture
- 7. The role of Shamanic Ecstasy
- 8. The origin of the term "shamanism"
- 9. Roles of the shaman
- 10. Reasons for this FAQ
-
- 1. Why were the terms used in this FAQ selected and do they have special
- meanings. There is an extensive literature about shamanism that has been
- compiled since the late Eighteenth Century. Like any field of study and
- religious practice, shamanism has developed a specialized vocabulary.
- Please note that some of the words used in the material that follows are
- drawn from scholars who have a solid background in shamanic studies and
- may have meanings that are specific and less general than is often the
- case in popular usage. Consulting a good dictionary should clear up any
- points of confusion.
-
- 2. What is Shamanism?
- Shamanism is classified by anthropologists as an archaic
- magico-religious phenomenon in which the shaman is the great master
- of ecstasy. Shamanism itself, was defined by the late Mircea Eliade
- as a technique of ecstasy. A shaman may exhibit a particular magical
- specialty (such as control over fire, wind or magical flight). When a
- specialization is present the most common is as a healer. The
- distinguishing characteristic of shamanism is its focus on an
- ecstatic trance state in which the soul of the shaman is believed to
- leave the body and ascend to the sky (heavens) or descend into the
- earth (underworld). The shaman makes use of spirit helpers, which
- he or she communicates with, all the while retaining control over
- his or her own consciousness. (Examples of possession occur, but
- are the exception, rather than the rule.) It is also important to
- note that while most shamans in traditional societies are men,
- either women or men may and have become shamans.
-
- 3. What is Shamanic Ecstasy and how does it compare with other
- forms of ecstasy?
-
- From the Greek 'ekstasis', ecstasy literally means to be placed
- outside, or to be placed.This is a state of exaltation in which a
- person stands outside of or transcends his or herself. Ecstasy may
- range from the seizure of the body by a spirit or the seizure of a
- person by the divine, from the magical transformation or flight of
- consciousness to psychiatric remedies of distress.
-
- Three types of Ecstasy are specified in the literature on the subject:
- a. Shamanic Ecstasy
- b. Prophetic Ecstasy
- c. Mystical Ecstasy
-
- Shamanic ecstasy is provoked by the ascension of the soul of the
- shaman into the heavens or its descent into the underworld. These
- states of ecstatic exaltation are usually achieved after great and
- strenuous training and initiation, often under distressing
- circumstances. The resulting contact by the shaman with the
- higher or lower regions and their inhabitants, and also with
- nature spirits enables him or her to accomplish such tasks as
- accompanying the soul of a deceased into its proper place in the
- next world, affect the well-being of the sick and to convey the
- story of their inner travels upon their return to the mundane
- awareness.
-
- The utterances of the shaman are in contrast with those of prophetic
- and mystical ecstasy. The prophet literally speaks for God, while the
- mystic reports an overwhelming divine presence. In mysticism, the
- direct knowledge or experience of the divine ultimate reality, which is
- perceptible in two ways, emotional and intuitive. While these three
- varieties of ecstatic experience are useful for the purposes of
- analysis and discussion, it is not unusual for more than one form of
- ecstasy to be present in an individual's experience.
-
- However, it can be argued that, generally speaking, there are three
- perceptive levels of ecstasy.
- a) The physiological response, in which the mind becomes absorbed in
- and focused on a dominant idea, the attention is withdrawn and the
- nervous system itself is in part cut off from physical sensory input. The
- body exhibits reflex inertia, involuntary nervous responses, frenzy.
- b) Emotional perception of ecstasy refers to overwhelming feelings of awe,
- anxiety, joy, sadness, fear, astonishment, passion, etc.
- c) Intuitive perception communicates a direct experience and
- understanding of the transpersonal experience of expanded states of
- awareness or consciousness.
-
- While the physiological response is always present, the emotional response
- may or may not be significant when intuition is the principal means of
- ecstatic perception. Some have argued that beyond the intuitive state there
- is a fourth condition in which the holistic perception exceeds mental and
- emotional limitations and understanding.
-
- The ecstatic experience of the shaman goes beyond a feeling or perception of
- the sacred, the demonic or of natural spirits. It involves the
- shaman directly and actively in transcendent realities or lower realms of
- being. These experiencesa may occur in either the dream state, the
- awakened state, or both.
-
- 4. How does one become a shaman?
-
- Some have wondered if the experience of shamanic ecstasy or flight
- makes a person a shaman. Generally speaking, most would say no.
- A shaman is more than someone with an experience. First, he or she
- is a trained initiate. Usually years of enculturalization and
- training under a mentor precede becoming a functioning shaman.
- Second, a shaman is not just an initiate who has received inner and
- outer training, but is a master of shamanic journeying and techniques
- (shamanic ecstasy). This is not a casual acquaintance with such
- abilities, there is some degree of mastery of them. Finally, a
- shaman is a link or bridge between this world and the next. This
- is a sacred trust and a service to the community. Sometimes a
- community that a shaman serves in is rather small. In other
- instances it may be an entire nation. A lot of that depends on
- social and cultural factors.
-
- One becomes a shaman by one of three methods:
- a) Hereditary transmission;
- b) Spontaneous selection or "call" or "election";
- c) personal choice and quest. (This latter method is less frequent
- and traditionally such a shaman is considered less powerful than one
- selected by one of the two preceding methods.) The shaman is not
- recognized as legitimate without having undergone two types of
- training:
- a) Ecstatic (dreams, trances, etc.)
- b) Traditional ("shamanic techniques, names and functions of
- spirits,mythology and genealogy of the clan, secret language, etc.) The
- two-fold course of instruction, given by the spirits and the old master
- shamans is equivalent to an initiation." (Mircea Eliade, The Encyclopedia
- of Religion, v. 13 , p. 202; Mcmillian, N.Y., 1987.) It is also possible
- for the entire process to take place in the dream state or in ecstatic
- experience.
- Thus, there is more to becoming a shaman than a single experience.
- It requires training, perseverance and service.
-
- 5. What is the role of personal crisis or trauma or crisis in the
- selection or development of a shaman?
- A common experience of the call to shamanism is a psychic or spiritual
- crisis, which often accompanies a physical or even a medical crisis, and
- is cured by the shaman him or herself. This is a common occurrence for
- all three types of shamanic candidates described above. The shaman is
- often marked by eccentric behavior such as periods of melancholy,
- solitude, visions, singing in his or her sleep, etc. The inability of the
- traditional remedies to cure the condition of the shamanic candidate and
- the eventual self cure by the new shaman is a significant episode in
- development of the shaman. The underlying significant aspect of this
- experience, when it is present,is the ability of the shaman to manage
- and resolve periods of distress.
-
- 6. Does the presence of an active shamanic tradition necessarily mean that
- the society itself should be deemed "shamanic"?
- No, not at all. The presence of shamanism in a nation or a community does
- not mean that shamanism is central to the spiritual or religious life of
- the community or region. Shamanism often exists alongside and even in
- cooperation with the religious or healing practices of the community.
-
- 7. What is meant by shamanic ecstasy and what role does it actually play
- in shamanism?
- The ecstatic technique of shamanism does not involve itself in the broad
- range of ecstasy reported in the history of religion. It is specifically
- focused on the transpersonal movement of the consciousness of the
- shaman into higher or lower realms of consciousness and existence.
- Another aspect of shamanism is that compared to other spiritual
- traditions, it is a path that the individual walks alone. While much of
- the focus of shamanic studies has been on the shamanic complexes of north
- and central Asia, shamanism is a universal phenomenon, not confined to any
- particular region or culture.
-
- 8. What is the origin of the word "shaman"?
- Shaman comes from the language of the Tungus of North-Central Asia. It
- came into use in English via Russian.
-
- 9. What are the usual roles of a shaman?
- In contemporary, historical or traditional shamanic practice the shaman
- may at times fill the role of priest, magician, metaphysician or healer.
- Personal experience is the prime determinant of the status of a shaman.
- Knowledge of other realms of being and consciousness and the cosmology of
- those regions is the basis of the shamanic perspective and power. With this
- knowledge, the shaman is able to serve as a bridge between the mundane and
- the higher and lower states The shaman lives at the edge of reality as most
- people would recognize it and most commonly at the edge of society itself.
- Few indeed have the stamina to adventure into these realms and endure the
- outer hardships and personal crises that have been reported by or
- observed of many shamans.
-
- 10. Why was this FAQ written?
- This FAQ was originally written to support a new Usenet
- newsgroup, 'soc.religion.shamanism'. The purpose of this
- newsgroup is to provide a forum for discussion and exchange of ideas,
- views and information about historic,traditional, tribal and
- contemporary shamanism. This FAQ is intended to provide a useful general
- overview of what 'shamanism' actually means and what it is in practice.
- In doing so, it has focused on shamanic ecstasy as being at the heart
- of shamanic experience and practice. Many other aspects of shamanic
- experience are encountered in the journey toward that center. Likewise,
- much is also experienced in the journey out from that core experience.
-
- End of FAQ
-