Historical dictionary of shamanism

JONES, LESLIE ELLEN

In her volumeDruid, Shaman, Priest(1998), Jones discusses theCeltic Druidas a shaman, not only examining ancient evidence but also critically engaging withneoshamanicmanifestations of Celtic shamanism. Regarding the former, Jones concurs with other scholars in arguing that the termsCeltandshamanare constructed and problematic, but that shamanistic aspects can reliably be discerned in such literature as the Welsh poet Taliesin and warrior-hero Owein ap Urien. Addressing neo-shamanism, she focuses on the work ofJohn Matthews, commenting especially on the contrast between Matthews’s apparently accessible and “safe” practices vis-à-vis the more challenging, even dangerous path of other, indigenous shamanisms. Jones is quick to dismiss Matthews’s practices as lightweight andNew Age, but Celtic shamanism today is by no means singular, and there are practitioners who not only integrate their practices into the challenges of everyday life but also engage with the “dark side” of the shaman, such asPhilipGreywolfShallcrass.