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Indigenous Healing Practices in India: Shamanism, Spirit Possession, and Healing Shrines

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Abstract

This chapter undertakes an exhaustive review of the vast literature on indigenous healing within anthropology and psychology. Although the topic of ritual healing has been popular within anthropology, in more recent times, it has also drawn the interest of scholars in psychology and related fields. Much of the early research on indigenous healing or ritual healing focussed on the practices of healing cults and indigenous healers and shamans in non-Western contexts. These studies approached healing in terms of symbolic practices and performances. More recently, however, scholars have looked at the everyday contexts of healing, studying situations where people turn to alternative healing practices for relief from illness or distress. Accordingly, the key terms for these practices have changed, with ‘ritual healing’ and ‘indigenous healing’ giving way to ‘everyday healing’ or, often, simply healing. In tracing these changes in the study of healing, this chapter addresses the key questions about efficacy and effectiveness that are central to this field of study. While arguing for the powerful place of diverse healing practices in society, this chapter cautions against simplistic attempts to incorporate alternative healing within biomedical practices of treatment and cure.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    The terms ‘Indian’ and ‘indigenous’ continue to be retained despite various difficulties. For instance, while unani and homeopathy fall under the rubric of ‘Indian Systems of Medicine’, unani actually has Greco-Arabic origins and homeopathy originated in Germany. Further, as Mukharji (2009) has pointed out, the ambiguous phrase ‘indigenous drugs’ does not recognize the plurality of botanical traditions involved; it could refer to drugs available in India, drugs grown in India, or drugs used in indigenous pharmacopoeias.

  2. 2.

    See Ranganathan (2014) for a more elaborate discussion of these initiatives and the controversies surrounding them.

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Correspondence to Shubha Ranganathan .

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Ranganathan, S. (2018). Indigenous Healing Practices in India: Shamanism, Spirit Possession, and Healing Shrines. In: Misra, G. (eds) Psychosocial Interventions for Health and Well-Being. Springer, New Delhi. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-3782-2_7

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