Lexington Books
Pages: 270
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-2621-9 • Hardback • April 2008 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
H. Sidky is a professor in the Department of Anthropology at Miami University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter 1. From Siberia to Nepal: The Discourse on Shamanism
Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Jhãkris and Other Intercessors: The Problems of Defining Shamanism
Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Myths, Narratives, and Ethnography: Clues for the Origins of the Jhãkri
Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Seized by Spirits: The Jhãkri's Calling, Initiation, and Training
Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Ornaments and Instruments of the Gods: The Jhãkri's Ritual Outfit and Paraphernalia
Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Altered States of Consciousness, Hallucinogenic Drugs, Spirit Possession, and Shamanism
Chapter 8 Chapter 7. The Jhãkri's Cosmos: The Nature of the Spirit World
Chapter 9 Chapter 8. Implicated in Evil: The Shaman and the Witch
Chapter 10 Chapter 9. Ban-Jhãkri: Supernatural Abductions and Shamanic Initiation
Chapter 11 Chapter 10. Jhãkri Basnu: Shamanizing and Ritual Drama
Chapter 12 Chapter 11. Shamanic Healing
Chapter 13 Chapter 12. From Nepal to Siberia: Disentangling a Conceptual Morass
Sidky combines his careful ethnographic study of shamanism as lived in Nepal with a comprehensive and critical review of the broad literature on shamanism. By doing so, he offers much needed order and clarity in this contested field of study. This is a major contribution both to anthropology and the history of religion.
— Erika Bourguignon, Ohio State University
Sidky's book is a complete overview of Nepali, Siberian, and Tibetan shamanism as well as an in-depth study of the Nepali jhãkri tradition. It overcomes the confusion created by Eliade's unsupported concepts and puts shamanic studies back on the track of empirical social science. It must be read by anyone seriously interested in shamanic healing. This is the best of ethnographic anthropology, because it is based on an intimate acquaintance with the shamans and their work. It captures the human reality of their profession and doesn't obscure it with mysticism or fanciful nonsense. It is full of real myth and real magical healing that is far more exciting to someone who wants to know the truth about shamanism. Its facts are more exciting than speculative reconstructions of nonsensical archaic modalities. Sidky examines an incredible range of scholarship on shamanism and is able to sift the wheat from the chaff.
— James W. Dow, Oakland University
Haunted by the Archaic Shaman [is] an important, significant contribution to anthropology and comparative religions. Combining firsthand ethnography with in-depth scholarly discussion of shamanism. . . . Sidky discusses in depth academic usages of 'shaman,' showing that the term is often used imprecisely and erroneously. The scholarship is impressively sound, with vivid firsthand descriptions of jhãkris, thorough coverage of literature on shamanism; [and] solid analyses of the discourse on shamanism, cutting through fad usage, racist usage, and primitivism. [This book] will be a must-have for any scholars discussing shamanism.
— Alice Beck Kehoe, professor of anthropology emeritus, Marquette University
Sidky's commitment to scientific, verifiable conclusions is, likewise, admirable…. And though it does not resolve the knotty questions of how to define and practice ethnography, it offers an instructive example of how one very conscientious scholar has dealt with them.
— Journal of Folklore Research