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Shamanism and Vulnerability on the North and South American Great Plains
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01 December 2020

The book reveals the various ways in which anthropologists, historians, folklorists, and other writers have often misrepresented indigenous shamanism and revitalization movements by unconsciously projecting ideologies and assumptions derived from modern ‘contract societies’ onto ethnographic and historical realities. Lowrey also provides alternative ways of understanding indigenous American communities and their long histories of interethnic relations with expanding colonial and national states in the Americas. A creative historical and ethnographical reevaluation of the last few decades of scholarship on shamanism, disability, and dependence, Shamanism and Vulnerability on the North and South American Great Plains will be of interest to scholars of North and South American anthropology, indigenous history, American studies, and feminism.
“A creative, brilliant, often witty and acerbic, and always unsettling rejoinder to a long history of colonial, settler, and white representation of Native peoples. . . . As a contribution to our thinking on a range of familiar topics—shamanism, indigenous resistance, settler colonialism, feminist thought, and disability—it offers critical insights that will appeal to scholars from many fields.”
—Bret Gustafson, Washington University in St. Louis
“A unique and highly imaginative addition to the literatures in South American ethnology, ethnohistory, and theories of modernity.”
—Jonathan D. Hill, Southern Illinois University
"The book is packed with keen insights. . . . commingled with ethnohistory and critiques of previous narratives."
—CHOICE
“A unique and important text that will both challenge and appeal to scholars of anthropology and religious studies as well as sociology, disability studies, and history.”
—Nova Religio