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The Ojibwa Vision Quest

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Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies

Abstract

Like other Algonkian-speaking groups, the Ojibwa traditionally sought personal relations with guardian spirits whom they encountered in visions, as a rite of passage into status as adults. Visions were sometimes sought as early as age three or four, and were generally accomplished no later than puberty. The procedures for cultivating visions blended practical and ritual elements. The procedures were both explained informally and portrayed in myths and belief-legends. Roheim interpreted vision quests in keeping with Freud's general theory of religion, as evidence of fixated Oedipus complexes; but a pathologizing interpretation is inappropriate. Detailed analyses of both boys' and girls' self-reports readily support diagnoses of healthy genitality, rather than Oedipal fixation. Vision quests are better regarded as manifestations of ego ideals, leading in most cases to improved ego–superego integration.

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Correspondence to Dan Merkur.

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Merkur, D. The Ojibwa Vision Quest. Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies 4, 149–170 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1015588819899

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