Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T02:27:39.407Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Omens and their explanation among the Buryat

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Get access

Extract

For the believing, shamanist nature is impregnated with mysterious activity. It is a consequence of the belief in a multiplicity of souls that a person, that is a human consciousness, need not always be where his body seems to be; and in everyday life a man does not expect to be conscious of what his soul may be doing. The idea that, without losing their individual personalities, the souls of certain dead people are transformed after death into the spirits of mountains, animal species, and other natural phenomena, means that human beings are surrounded on every side by a nature which is not what it seems to be; in rivers, animals and trees, and hidden by such an existence, are many fully conscious, aware, desirous beings. There is therefore in this world—but greater than it, extending also to other regions of the cosmos, the skies, the air, the earth and the underworld—a further reality, which ordinary people only fully realize when they die and become part of it.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Archives Européenes de Sociology 1976

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

(1) A similar point was made by Julia Kristeva when she suggested that the speaking subject had not been adequately discussed in theories of linguistics. She wrote: «Si la suspension de l'objet est de règie dans une thèorie logique, elle ne saurait l'être dans une théorie scientifique « factuelle » (physique, psychologique, etc., mais aussi, et davantage encore, linguistique); Apichez Saussure comme chez Chomsky, la position de cet objet est logiquement antérieure à la théorie […] et se définit par une certaine théorie implicite du sujet parlant; si la cohérence des théories linguistiques comme ensemble d'une classe dénommée « la linguistique » se présente comme due à un objet « intégral et concret », elle est en réalité produite par la posture spécifique d'un sujet qui, à la fois, s'y produit et en expose la théorie ». Du sujet en linguistique, Langages, (1971).

(2) See Matta, Da, Les présages Apinayé, in Echanges et communications. Mélanges offerts à Claude Lévi-Strauss (Paris, Mouton, 1970), t. IGoogle Scholar.

(3) Khangalov, M. N., Sobranie Sčinenij, vol. III (Ulan-Ude, Burjatskoe knižnoe Izdatel'stvo, 1960), pp. 782Google Scholar.

(4) Id. Sobranie Sočnenij, vol. I (Ulan-Ude, Burjatskoe knižnoe Izdatel' stvo, 1958), p. 334.

(5) Id. op. cit. vol. III, pp. 67–69.

(6) Foucault, M., Les mots et les choses Paris (1973), pp. 3245Google Scholar.

(7) Bogatyrev, Pierre, Actes magiques, rites et croyances en Russie subcarpathique (Paris, Librairie ancienne H. Champion, 1929), pp. 59Google Scholar.

(8) Ibid. pp. 5–27.

(9) Khangalov, , op. cit.. III, p. 58Google Scholar.

(10) Ibid. p. 72.

(11) Ibid. p. 13.

(12) Batobov, P. P. and Khorošsikh, P. P., Primety Alarskikh Burjat, Burjatovedčeskij Sbornik [Irkutsk], I (1926)Google Scholar.

(13) Batorov, P. P., Bjelkovan'e u Alars-kikh Burjat i narodnoe pover'ja, Burjatievedenie, [Burjat-Mongol'skoe naučnoe Obščcestvo im. Dorži Banzarova, Verkhneudinsk], I (1925)Google Scholar.

(14) Khangalov, , op. cit. III, p. 70Google Scholar.

(15) Ibid. p. 57.

(16) Batorov, and Khorošikh, , op. cit. p. 3Google Scholar.

(17) Khangalov, , op. cit. III, p. 75Google Scholar.

(18) Ibid. p. 64.

(19) Ibid. p. 66.

(20) Ibid. p. 69.

(21) Khangalov, , op. cit.. III, pp. 5960Google Scholar.

(22) Ibid. p. 64.

(23) Khangalov, , op. cit. II, pp. 134135Google Scholar.

(24) Khangalov, , op. cit. III, p. 67Google Scholar.

(25) Matta, Da, op. cit. p. 87Google Scholar.

(26) These ideas are discussed in Whitehead, A.N., Process and Reality (London, Macmillan, 1929), pp. 256–63Google Scholar.

(27) Khangalov, , op. cit. III, pp. 77–8Google Scholar.

(28) Ibid. I, pp. 307, 310, 426, 502.

(29) Khangalov, , op. cit. III, p. 68Google Scholar.

(30) Turner, Victor, Symbols in African Ritual, Science (1973), p. 1101Google Scholar.

(31) Ibid.

(32) Waddell, L.A., Lamaism, the Buddhism of Tibet (Cambridge 1967), p. 368Google Scholar.