"Now many of those things are shown to me which I was denied before": Seidr, shamanism and journeying, past and present

One thousand years ago, the Lawspeaker of Iceland went "Under the Cloak" in quest of answers to problems of religious difference. This "out-sitting" has been interpreted as a kind of "seidr," potentially shamanistic practice of Northern Europe. This article discusses pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses
Main Author: Blain, Jenny
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Sage 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/000842980503400105
Description
Summary:One thousand years ago, the Lawspeaker of Iceland went "Under the Cloak" in quest of answers to problems of religious difference. This "out-sitting" has been interpreted as a kind of "seidr," potentially shamanistic practice of Northern Europe. This article discusses practitioner interpretations of evidence for seidr and its relation to "shamanism" in the old literature, revealing seidr as gendered shamanistic practice, involving ecstatic communication with spirits, journeying and shape-shifting, arousing mixed feelings in communities in which practitioners worked. The article explores ways in which people in North America and Britain are reconstructing seidr today as shamanistic practice with its own contradictions and contestations.