Shamans, Bureaucrats, and Their Cosmologies: Local Religious Organisations in Buryatia and the Irkutsk Region

Authors

  • Maria Volkova The Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration Автор

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31250/1815-8870-2021-17-51-39-71

Keywords:

shamanism, symbolic classification, bureaucratic optics, anthropology of religion, Mary Douglas, grid-group, shaman societies, interaction

Abstract

Over the course of the last 18 years, shamans in Buryatia and the Irkutsk Region have started to register “local religious organizations”. This development has transformed shamanism itself whilst also forcing the Ministry of Justice to articulate whether shamanism could be considered a religion. The article describes this process as an interactive loop: the classifiable (shamans) responds to the process of classification (state registration) and then changes that classification. The study hinges on two findings. First, the differences in the structure of shamanic organizations lead them to create fundamentally different ways of describing the world (classification systems). Secondly, some of these classifications align more closely with the language of the state. The author builds on the “grid and group” model by Mary Douglas, which is subsequently augmented with conceptual insights from Bernstein and Collins. The model makes it possible to highlight three types of organizations that respond differently to the language of state classification. The study is based on empirical data (40 interviews and participant observation) collected by the author during an expedition to Buryatia and the Irkutsk region between December 2019 and January 2020.

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Published

2021-12-25

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How to Cite

Shamans, Bureaucrats, and Their Cosmologies: Local Religious Organisations in Buryatia and the Irkutsk Region. (2021). Antropologicheskij Forum Forum for Anthropology and Culture, 51, 39–71. https://doi.org/10.31250/1815-8870-2021-17-51-39-71