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Author Wallis, Robert J.

Title Shamans/neo-Shamans : ecstasy, alternative archaeologies, and contemporary pagans / Robert J. Wallis.

Publication Info. London ; New York : Routledge, 2003.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xviii, 306 pages) : illustrations
data file
Physical Medium polychrome
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 253-293) and index.
Contents 1. "White shamans" : sources for neo-shamanisms -- 2. Plastic medicine men? : appraising the "great pretenders" -- 3. Taliesin's trip, Wyrd Woden : druid and heathen neo-shamans -- 4. "Celtic" and "northern" shamanisms? : contesting the past -- 5. "Sacred" sites? : neo-shamans and prehistoric heritage -- 6. Waking Neolithic ancestors : further controversies and "reburial" -- 7. Invading Anthros, thieving Archos, wannabe Indians : academics, neo-shamans and indigenous communities -- 8. Conclusion : neo-shamanisms in post-modernity.
Summary Shamans and shamanisms are in vogue at present. In popular culture, such diverse characters as occultist Aleister Crowley, Doors musician Jim Morrison and performance artist Joseph Beuys have been termed shamans. The anthropological construct 'shamanism', on the other hand, has associations with sorcery, witchcraft and healing, and archaeologists have suggested the meaning of prehistoric cave art lies with shamans and altered consciousness. Robert J. Wallis explores the interface between 'new' (modern western), indigenous and prehistoric shamans, and assesses the implications for archaeologists, anthropologists, indigenous communities, heritage managers, and neo-Shamanic practitioners. Identifying key figures in neo-Shamanisms, including Mircea Eliade, Carlos Castaneda and Michael Harner, Wallis assesses the way in which 'traditional' practices have been transformed into 'western' ones, such as Castaneda's Don Juan teachings and Harner's core shamanism. The book draws on interviews and self-reflective insider ethnography with a variety of practitioners, particularly contemporary pagans in Britain and north America from druid and heathen traditions, to elucidate what shamans do.; Wallis looks at historical and archaeological sources to elucidate whether 'Celtic' and 'northern' shamanism may have existed; he explores contemporary pagan engagements with prehistoric sacred sites such as Stonehenge and Avebury, and discusses the controversial use by neo-Shamans of indigenous (particularly native American) shamanism. Rather than discuss neo-Shamans as inauthentic, invalid culture-stealers, Wallis offers a more detailed and complex appraisal. He makes it clear that scholars must be prepared to give up some of their hold over knowledge, and not only be aware of these neo-Shamanic approaches but also engage in a serious dialogue with such 'alternative' histories.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Shamanism.
Shamanism.
New Age movement.
New Age movement.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Other Form: Print version: Wallis, Robert J. Shamans/neo-Shamans. London ; New York : Routledge, 2003 0415302021 041530203X (DLC) 2002068282 (OCoLC)50333885
ISBN 0203417577 (electronic book)
9780203417577 (electronic book)
0203419073
9780203419076
1280071370
9781280071379
9780415302029
0415302021
9780415302036
041530203X
0415302021
041530203X (paperback)
Standard No. 9780203417577
Report No. MYILIB_CUp