Historical dictionary of shamanism

HUNTING MAGIC

The notion that shamans believe they can control game via magical means and so ensure a successful hunt. The concept tends to signify stupidity and/or superstitious belief in magic on the part of the peoples at issue. Hunting magic was an idea popularized by Sir James Frazer (1854–1941) in his infamousThe GoldenBough(1890) and informs us more about the prejudices of Victorian male armchair anthropologists than about indigenous practices and knowledges. Hunting magic has since been applied to and become erroneously synonymous with the making ofrock artandEuropeanPaleolithic cave artin particular: hungry hunters painted images of their quarry in the false belief that by jabbing spears at these effigies, or painting mortal wounds on them, this game could be successfully hunted in the bush. Despite its prevalence, this interpretation is supported by little or no evidence (e.g., most of theanimalsdepicted were not primary sources of food). A more nuanced understanding of hunting magic and the role of shamans in it is facilitated by the newanimism. Shamans, certainly, may undertakejourneysinto theother worldin order to seek out game andmediatewithother-thanhumanpersonsorspiritsin order to negotiate success for hunters, usually making agreements or sacrifices in turn, such as the establishing and regulating of certaintaboos. In this sense, hunting magic is more likeresource managementthan foolish superstition.