Shamans study shamanism: The world in the podcasts of Mongolian shamans
Etnografia. Praktyki, Teorie, Doświadczenia December 16, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.26881/etno.2024.10.03
Summary
Mongolian shamans use social media to spread their understanding of shamanism, blending tradition, Buddhism, and global movements like neo-shamanism and environmentalism. While their individual expressions vary, they share recurring themes about the complex interdependence of humans and non-human beings within a hierarchical cosmic system. The analysis contributes to discussions on knowledge production in different discourses and attempts to incorporate the ontology of the "subject" into ethnographic theories, drawing on philosophically oriented anthropology.
Study at a glance
| Design | qualitative study |
|---|---|
| Population | selected Mongolian shamans |
| Key finding | Mongolian shamans' social media activity reveals both diversity and common elements about the interdependence of human and non-human beings in a hierarchical cosmic system. |
Abstract
The article analyses the social media activity of selected Mongolian shamans intended for dissemination of what they believe to be the correct knowledge about Mongolian shamanism. The Internet is a tool that, combined with their own creativity, allows themto convey aspects of this phenomenon that are difficult to verbalize. On the one hand, the shamans present a great diversity, make use of different ideas (tradition, heritage, Buddhism), and are open to global movements such as neo-shamanism or environmentalism, but on the other hand, their statements exhibit some common, recurring elements aboutthe complex interdependence of human and non-human beings in a hierarchical cosmic system. This analysis is a voice in the discussion on the production of knowledge in various discourses, an attempt to incorporate the ontology of the “subject” into ethnographic theories, inspired by the work of philosophically oriented anthropologists.