Anthropology of Consciousness

Abstract


Volume 14, Number 2, September-December 2003, pages 27-59

Pathologizing Possession: An Essay on Mind, Self, and Experience in Dissociation

Ashwin Budden
University of California, San Diego
Anthropology
9500 Gilman Dr.
La Jolla, CA  92093-0532
abudden@ucsd.edu

In this paper, I critique the classic psychoanalytic anthropological construal of dissociative spirit possession  as a pathological phenomenon. I review some of the relevant theoretical and ethnographic literature on this subject but focus on the work of two prominent psychoanalytic anthropologists to explore divergent views of the psychological nature of pathological and religious experience. Emphasis is placed on the necessity for taking into account the culture-specific factors that shape dissociative possession, particularly with regard to spiritual experiences. I also move beyond this view to an embodiment approach that is useful for analyzing the experiential ground of spirit possession, and thus for providing insight into how particular individual and cultural realities are constructed through dissociation.


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copyright 2004 American Anthropological Association