Shamans, plants, and spirits: Health and disease in the Plantocene
Etnografia Praktyki Teorie Doświadczenia December 16, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.26881/etno.2024.10.11 via OpenAlex
Summary
People in Poland who use psychoactive plants like ayahuasca and psilocybin mushrooms for healing view health and disease through a holistic lens, moving away from conventional medicine. The study, based on fourteen interviews and online discussions, introduces the idea of 'Plantocene,' suggesting that these plants have agency that affects human behavior and societal futures. It raises ethical concerns about appropriating plant narratives while ignoring indigenous rights, which may exacerbate global inequalities.
Study at a glance
| Design | qualitative study |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 14 |
| Population | people from Poland engaging with psychoactive plants |
| Key finding | The research highlights a shift from biomedical paradigms to holistic approaches in understanding health through the agency of psychoactive plants. |
Abstract
This paper explores the experiences and perspectives of people from Poland who engage with psychoactive plants, referred to by me as the Plants, such as ayahuasca, psilocybin mushrooms, and mescaline-containing cacti-for healing and personal growth. Based on fourteen in-depth interviews and analysis of online discussions, the paper examines how my interlocutors conceptualize health, disease, and healing through their encounters with the Plants. The research highlights the shift from conventional biomedical paradigms to holistic, plant-centered approaches in which the Plants are seen as agentive beings capable of communicating with humans. The concept of the “Plantocene” is introduced as a speculative framework, suggesting that plant agency influences human behavior and planetary futures. The paper considers the ethical concerns that arise from attributing ultimate agency to the Plants, and from appropriating plants as “Slavic” or “global.” Such narratives legitimize “drawing” from the Plants and indigenous communities without acknowledging their rights, and may silence and deepen existing global inequalities.