Folklore. Electronic Journal of Folklore Folklore 1 1996
HEREDITARY TRANSMISSION IN SIBERIAN SHAMANISM AND THE
CONCEPT OF THE REALITY OF LEGENDS
Aado Lintrop
Belief in the hereditary transmission of shaman's gift is common to all Siberian
shamanism. One can find corresponding motifs in Nganasan shamanism as well
as in Tuvinian one. Often there is impossible to become a shaman without
having shamans-ancestors in family. Sometimes they are namely the spirits of shamans-ancestors,
who at first reveal themselves to the devotee and force him to shamanize. More frequently they are
supernormal beings, who were in close relations with them - for instance former helping spirits of a
shaman-ancestor. The Gilyak researcher Taksami wrote: "The boy named Koinyt, who's father - the
shaman - died not long ago, fell asleep after noon and began suddenly to toss about and cry,
repeating typical shouts of shamans. After waking he looked pale and tired. In dream he saw two
spirits - a man and a woman, who said: "Before we played with your father, now we would play
with you." (Taksami 1981, 167) Belief in the hereditary transmission of shaman's gift was firm
among several peoples in Siberia. For that very reason children in famous shaman families, who
desired not to become shamans, fell ill and lived as mentally or physically diseased persons. For
example Nikolai Agitshev, son of the famous Ostyak-Samoyedic shaman, who worked in 1930-is
together with linguist G. Prokofyev. Last years of his life Nikolai spent in loneliness, made wooden
idols and fed them. (Prokofyeva 1981, 45-46)
In the present paper we attempt to explain some aspects of the belief in the hereditary transmission
of shaman's talent. Associating the shaman trance with a hypnotic state, we proceed from the
definition and general causes of origin of an altered state of consciousness as formulated by Arnold
Ludwig (Ludwig 1968, 69) and the analysis of spirit possession given by Sheila Walker. The latter
shows, elaborating on Merton Gill's and Margaret Brenman's psychoanalytical approach to hypnosis
(Gill, Brenman 1961), that hypnosis and possession represent different forms of the same
phenomenon - regression in the service of the ego (Walker 1972, 26-51). Together with Walker, we
can say, that in many cultures the hypnotists need not to be a person. The external pressure that
influences the individual and his own conscious and subconscious motives, based on different
religious ideas, create a subsystem of the ego, which is the supernatural being that possesses an
individual. After that, we shall come from psychoanalysis to psychology and try to explain the
process of origin of the shaman's sickness, relying on the notion of the generalized reality-
orientation borrowed from Roland Shor. He termed so a structured frame of reference that charac-
terizes a normal state of consciousness and supports, interprets and gives meaning to all the expe-
rience of an individual. (Shor 1959, 585) Shor stated that hypnosis is a complex of two processes,
one of which is the construction of a special, temporary orientation and the other is the relative
fading of the generalized reality-orientation into non-functional unawareness. (A.-L. Siikala's
resumé of theses of Shor - Siikala 1978, 50) To mark the temporary orientation that enables
possession (or, more narrowly, the shaman's sickness), we are using the term reality of legends.
This is a system which springs from religious images transmitted by tradition and which arises onto
generalized reality-orientation in some cases of altered state of consciousness. Applying it, we state
that the shaman's sickness common among the Siberian peoples represents an acute manifestation of
the shaman's world induced by an activation of the reality of legends and caused by any event or
provocation that can be interpreted appropriately. The novice is possessed not only by one
particular supernatural being but the whole world beyond with its inhabitants. Although familiar
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