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Wayward Shamans

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Wayward Shamans tells the story of an idea that humanity’s first expression of art, religion and creativity found form in the figure of a proto-priest known as a shaman. Tracing this classic cate...
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  • 03 May 2013
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Wayward Shamans tells the story of an idea that humanity’s first expression of art, religion and creativity found form in the figure of a proto-priest known as a shaman. Tracing this classic category of the history of anthropology back to the emergence of the term in Siberia, the work follows the trajectory of European knowledge about the continent’s eastern frontier. The ethnographic record left by German natural historians engaged in the Russian colonial expansion project in the 18th century includes a range of shamanic practitioners, varied by gender and age. Later accounts by exiled Russian revolutionaries noted transgendered shamans. This variation vanished, however, in the translation of shamanism into archaeology theory, where a male sorcerer emerged as the key agent of prehistoric art. More recent efforts to provide a universal shamanic explanation for rock art via South Africa and neurobiology likewise gloss over historical evidence of diversity. By contrast this book argues for recognizing indeterminacy in the categories we use, and reopening them by recalling their complex history.
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Price: $34.95
Pages: 288
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 03 May 2013
ISBN: 9780520955318
Format: eBook
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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction
Chapter 1 Discoveries of an Imaginary Place
Chapter 2 Strange Landscapes, Familiar Magic
Chapter 3 People in a Land Before Time
Chapter 4 The Invention of Siberian Ethnology
Chapter 5 Sex, Gender, and Encounters with Spirits
Chapter 6 Changed Men and Changed Women
Chapter 7: French Connections and the Spirits of Prehistory
Chapter 8: Conclusion

Notes
Bibliographic Note
References