Historical dictionary of shamanism

HUMPHREY, CAROLINE

(1943– )
Professor of anthropology at Cambridge University. Humphrey has carried out research inSiberiaandMongoliain the Soviet and post-Soviet periods, as well as inIndia, Nepal, Inner Mongolia, and Manchuria. Her research interests include shamanism, theories ofritual, and socialist/postsocialist economy and society. With Nicholas Thomas, she coeditedShamanism,History, and the State(1994) and contributed an important chapter on thepoliticalrole of shamans in the Manchu state. WithUrgungeOnon, she coauthoredShamans and Elders(1996), which explores the role of shamans in Daur Mongol societies, carefully distinguishing them fromelders. Both books are important engagements with the political and social place of shamans in their cultures and redress an imbalanced view of shamanism as a separate domain of life identifiable as “religion.” The latter book is also among the most detailed accounts of historical and near-contemporary Mongolian shamans and their practices, roles, and relationships with other religious functionaries. It uses “shamanism” to refer to “the entire conglomeration of ideas about beings in the world which includes the shaman,” and “shamanship” to refer to the shaman’s practice orperformance.