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Summary: Authentic, indigenous shamanic traditions
Comment: This is a very good journal that runs toward the academic/intellectual. The reviewers - who seem to have anthropology backgrounds - work at screening out "inauthentic" material, books and articles that usurp indigenous traditions or make up stuff. Books get reviewed more readily if the author has that PhD after their names. Fiction is rather out as well (though if they deem your novel authentic enough, they will list you). Castenada is exposed as the [...] he is.
The editors seem to truly respect the old cultures, and work more at revealing these traditions as a form of preservation and learning from them, rather than from borrowing (stealing?)then mushing elements all together into a New Age neoshaman deal where - after paying big bucks - you learn to fly overnight or get rich by drumming...you know, "the secret". The true shaman practicing in context within his or her own culture is the centerpiece here. And it isn't always pretty or understandable or sanitary to the urbanite westerner. So proceed with that in mind if you are looking for easy "magick" tricks. \
Lesley Thomas, author of arctic shaman novel Flight of the Goose