Hamayon, Roberte
Hamayon, Roberte – French linguist and ethnologist. Hamayon has conducted extensive research on Mongolian peoples and shamanism in Mongolia, Siberia, and China. She has drawn attention to the negative connotations of isolating trance, ecstasy, and altered states of consciousness as defining features of shamanisms in Siberia, these having been used to demonize shamans in the past, and argues that in consequence these terms are of little use in informing our understanding of what shamans do. Hamayon theorizes about shamans, sex, and gender in Siberian shamanism, arguing that shamanic sĂ©ances among the Evenk (Tungus) and Buryat are themselves âsexual encounters.â As such, she argues that the âmarriageâ between shamans and their helpers is more significant in understanding what these shamans do than the ecstasy, mastery of spirits, or journeying emphasized by other scholars. Hamayonâs work has also clarified the relationship between shamans and community in pre-Soviet Siberia: shamans secured âgood luckâ for hunters, and the ceremony at which this is effected involved the interplay of âgameâ (hunted animals) and âgamesâ (entertainment and contests), enhancing our understanding of relationships, especially reciprocity, in shamanistic communities. Hamayon was a researcher (1965â74) at the French Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and since 1974 she has been director of studies at the Ăcole Pratique des Hautes Ătudes, Science of Religion Section. She is the founder of the Centre for Mongolian and Siberian Studies and its journal, Ătudes mongoles et sibĂ©riennes.
SOURCE:
Historical Dictionary of Shamanism by Graham Harvey and Robert J. Wallis 2007