Sacred Psychotherapy in the "Age of Authenticity": Healing and Cultural Revivalism in Contemporary Finland

Like other European countries, contemporary Finland has witnessed an explosion of healing modalities designatable as "New Age" (though not without profound controversy, [1]). This paper focuses on Finnish courses in lament (wept song, tuneful weeping with words) that combine healing concei...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Religions
Main Author: Wilce, James M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://openknowledge.nau.edu/1822/
http://openknowledge.nau.edu/1822/1/Wilce_JM_2011_Sacred_psychotherapy_age_authenticity_healing_cultural.pdf
https://doi.org/10.3390/rel2040566
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Summary:Like other European countries, contemporary Finland has witnessed an explosion of healing modalities designatable as "New Age" (though not without profound controversy, [1]). This paper focuses on Finnish courses in lament (wept song, tuneful weeping with words) that combine healing conceived along psychotherapeutic lines and lessons from the lament tradition of rural Karelia, a region some Finns regard as their cultural heartland. A primary goal of the paper is to explicate a concept of "authenticity" emerging in lament courses, in which disclosing the depths of one's feelings is supported not only by invoking "psy-" discourses of self-help, but also by construing the genuine emotional self-disclosure that characterizes neolamentation as a sacred activity and a vital contribution to the welfare of the Finnish people.