Buddhist visions, dreams, and possession trance: spiritual authority, ritual diversity and religious innovation in Thailand
South East Asia Research July 3, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1080/0967828x.2025.2532791 via Semantic Scholar
Summary
Thai religious life is diverse and continually expanding, with new spiritual figures and devotional cults emerging alongside established traditions like Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism, Brahmanism, and spirit cults. This expansion is driven by founders and followers who authorize novel deities, spirits, and Buddha images through origin narratives. Extraordinary experiences such as meditation visions, dreams, and possession trance—termed oneiric space—are central to spiritual authority in Thailand and fuel ongoing religious and ritual diversity.
Study at a glance
| Design | qualitative study |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Access to oneiric space—extraordinary experiences including meditation visions, dreams, and possession trance—is central to spiritual authority and drives the proliferation of new devotional cults in Thailand. |
Abstract
ABSTRACT Thai religious and ritual life is diverse and dynamic, drawing on a wide range of influences including Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism, Brahmanism and spirit cults. A notable feature of Thai religiosity is its productivity, with a continual increase in the number of new spiritual figures at the centre of devotional cults that often have no direct precedents in established forms of ritual. I describe the processes that support the expansion of the Thai religious pantheon, as new spirits and gods emerge alongside established supernatural figures. I explore the question of how founders and followers of devotional cults authorize the worship of novel deities, spirits, and Buddha images. Drawing on origin narratives from followers of new ritual movements, I argue that both lay and monastic access to the field of oneiric space, extraordinary experiences that include meditation visions, dreams and possession trance, is central to notions of spiritual authority in Thailand and is an important source of the ongoing proliferation of religious and ritual diversity in the country.