Symbolic_healing_and_harming.pdf

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Sept
SYMBOLIC HEALING AND HARMING
Wed. Sept. 22, 2004
Read:
Brown:
Shamanism and its discontents
Ong:
The production of possession: spirits and the multinational corporation in
Malaysia
Good et al.: American oncology and the discourse on hope
Miner
Body ritual among the Nacirema
I.
Lourdes in southwestern France offers an example of religious, symbolic healing
A.
Divine intervention—St. Bernadette had a vision of the Virgin Mary
1.
The pilgrimage has been going on since 1858
2.
The initial vision said nothing about the spring’s healing powers
B.
Today
1.
Lourdes receives over 2 million visitors annually, including over 30,000
sick
2.
As happens with other forms of religious healing, cures validate it, but
failures cannot disprove it
3.
Pilgrims are the chronically ill who, usually, fail to respond to medical
remedies
a.
Despair, their lives severely disrupted
b.
The decision to travel changes their lives: their families are
energized, money is raised, perhaps by an congregation, the
preparation and journey are a dramatic break in routine
c.
Except for the initial cures in the 19 th century, Lourdes has failed
to cure those living in its vicinity
d.
Upon arrival, pilgrims are plunged into a “city of pilgrims”
1)
Previous cures are all that is talked about, there is evidence
everywhere—discarded crutches, etc.; the ritual begins
with a validation of the shrine’s power
Symbolic Healing 2004 Brown, Ong, Good, Miner 9/1/2005
2
2) Days are filled with trips to the grotto and religious
services
3)
Group processions can be as large as 40 or 50 thousand,
praying for others
a)
The majority of sick do not experience a cure, but
many say they feel better, clearly there are
psychological benefits from the experience
b)
One gains merit by making the trip: “The trip to
Lourdes is never made in vain”
c)
Those who help who are not sick gain merit
C.
“Miraculous” healings at Lourdes in the Church’s view are few: less than 100—
they require stringent documentation
1.
But there are well-documented cures
2.
Note that inexplicable cures of serious organic disease occur in everyday
medical practice. Any physician can provide examples
3.
At Lourdes, healing takes place as it does elsewhere
a.
No one regrows an amputated limb
b.
The paralyzed may get up and walk, but weight gain takes place
over weeks, any restored skin is scar tissue, etc.
D.
A great deal of literature disputes these cures
1.
Because it is assumed that to accept them means one has to believe what
Catholic theology says is happening.
E.
But Lourdes shows parallels with religious healing elsewhere:
1.
Such healing involves a coming together of the patient, his/her family, the
larger group, and the supernatural world by means of a dramatic,
emotionally charged, aesthetically rich ritual that expresses and reinforces
a shared ideology
2.
Compare to Brown’s discussion of Aguaruna shamanic healing
3
II.
Methods of supernatural healing highlight:
A.
The close interplay of bodily systems and emotional states
B.
The intimate relation of both to health and illness
C.
The parallel between inner disorganization and disturbed relations with one’s
group (or a disturbed cosmos, etc.)
D.
They indicate how a patterned interaction of patient, healer, and group within the
framework of a local set of assumptions can promote healing
1.
All the articles for today provide illustrations of symbolic harm and
healing
a.
Good et al.: no supernatural involved
b.
Brown, Ong and Miner, yes, the supernatural is involved
E.
These assumptions continue in modern society, although transformed
1.
Although if you assume a very outsider position, as Miner does, you will
conclude that the Nacirema reveal very strong underlying beliefs about
symbolic harm and healing, much of it supernaturally caused, or at least
influenced
2.
Good et al.’s discussion of books by Bernie Siegel and the Simontons
about somehow symbolically healing yourself (which, as Siegel points
out, may not be curing yourself)
a.
Are disputed by oncologists, yet they subscribe to a version of
symbolic healing as well
b.
What’s the difference?
F.
These healing systems often co-exist with naturalistic treatment: herbs,
manipulations, surgical operations
1.
And co-exist with the local version of biomedicine
III. Characteristics of etiology, diagnosis, treatment in systems that stress symbolic healing
and harming:
4
A.
These belief systems tend to assume that illness is a misfortune involving the
entire person
1.
The consequences have to do with the sick person’s relationships with the
spirit world and other members of the group
2.
Illness classifications often bear no resemblance to those of Western
medicine
a.
In particular, these systems don’t distinguish sharply between
mental and bodily illness, or between that due to natural and that
due to supernatural causes
1)
Both natural and supernatural causes can contribute
B.
Anthropologists often interpret such sicknesses as symbolic expressions of
internal conflicts or disturbed relationships to others (or both)
1.
Soul loss, possession by an evil spirit, magical insertion of a harmful body
by a sorcerer, machinations of offended or malicious ancestral ghosts
2.
Often it’s assumed that the patient laid her/himself open to these
calamities through some witting or unwitting transgression against the
supernatural world
a.
Examples from Ong?
3.
Or through incurring the enmity of a sorcerer or other enemy who
employed a sorcerer
4.
Maybe the transgressor wasn’t even the sufferer, but a relative
C.
How such illnesses are healed reveals underlying assumptions
1.
Oftentimes there is an attempt to correct the disturbance, the dis-order
a.
Discuss: examples in the West?
2.
The corrections, the restoration of order are carried out by shamans
a.
An intermediary between humans and the supernatural
b.
Usually a group is involved in the treatment session, not just the
curer and the patient
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c.
The shaman in the Ong article performs public rituals:
1)
His curing is restoring order: he makes a place “safe” again
2)
Discuss: any parallels with our society?
d.
Individuals are certainly treated as well as society, but notice that
responsibility falls, to some degree, on the individual
1)
The Ong piece: those who unknowingly urinate on an
inhabited site and fall sick are not as “resistant” as others
2)
Or didn’t eat any breakfast
D.
The group healing ritual
1.
Might be led by a religious practitioner, but what brings about healing is
different—the group itself is seen to do it
2.
May involve ancestral or other spirits
3.
We can find such rituals in many US churches:
a.
Charismatic Catholics, for example
b.
Discuss: other examples?
4.
Ritual (public ritual) can be seen as involving members of a culture sending
messages to one another about their lives, the meaning of life, what’s
important, etc.
5.
And rituals accomplish things
IV. Symbolic Harming: further discussion
A.
I mentioned last time Walter Cannon’s famous article on “Voodoo Death” 1
1.
An M.D., he explores questions about the efficacy of symbolic harming
a.
Among some Australian Aborigine cultures, if a very powerful curse
is directed at someone, h/she may eventually die
1 Walter Cannon, 1942. “‘Voodoo’ Death.” American Anthropologist 44: 169-181.
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