Embedded and borrowed subjectivity in the shamanic practices among Quechua from the Central Andes, Peru
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26881/etno.2024.10.08Słowa kluczowe:
relational ontology, shared subjectivity, agency, Quechua, AndesAbstrakt
The article explores the concept of “shared subjectivity” in the shamanic practices of the Quechua people in the central Andes of Peru. It reveals the interconnection between humans and non-humans in Quechua shamanic practices, where various ritual objects (stones, coca leaves, guinea pigs, and eggs) play active roles in rituals and in the process of synergistic becoming and building subjectivity. The analysis of these practices allowed for the identification of two different types of shared subjectivity: (1) borrowed
subjectivity (where a person’s essence temporarily transfers to ritual objects for diagnosis and healing); and (2) embedded subjectivity (where non-human agency permanently resides in objects such as power stones). These practices emphasize the fluid boundaries between humans and non-humans, as a foundation for Andean ontology, which can be defined as relational and fluid.
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