Shamanism vs Animism: Understanding Indigenous Spirituality
Important Context on Cultural Respect
Shamanism and animism are terms used to describe indigenous spiritual practices and worldviews from cultures worldwide. It's crucial to approach these topics with respect, acknowledging that these are living traditions belonging to specific cultures. This article discusses these concepts from an educational perspective while emphasizing that authentic shamanic practice belongs to specific cultural contexts and should not be appropriated. "Core shamanism" and neo-shamanism are modern Western adaptations, distinct from traditional indigenous shamanism.
What is Shamanism?
Shamanism is a spiritual practice found across many indigenous cultures worldwide, characterized by practitioners (shamans) who enter altered states of consciousness to journey to spirit worlds, communicate with spirits, retrieve information, perform healing, and mediate between the human and spirit realms. Shamans serve as intermediaries between their community and the spirit world, using techniques like drumming, dancing, plant medicines, or meditation to enter trance states. Shamanism is a practice or role, not a religion—shamans exist within various cultural and religious contexts.
Shamanism Characteristics:
- Nature: Spiritual practice and role
- Practitioner: Shaman (specific trained individual)
- Method: Altered states, spirit journeying, trance
- Purpose: Healing, divination, mediation with spirits
- Focus: Active practice, specific techniques
- Scope: Specialized role within community
Shamanism is the "practice of spirit work"—specific techniques for journeying to spirit worlds and working with spiritual forces.
What is Animism?
Animism is a worldview or belief system that holds that all things—animals, plants, rocks, rivers, weather, places—possess spirit, consciousness, or soul. Animists perceive the world as alive, ensouled, and relational, where humans are one type of person among many (animal persons, plant persons, stone persons, etc.). Animism is not a practice but a way of perceiving and relating to the world—a fundamental understanding that everything is alive and deserves respect. Animism is often the worldview within which shamanism operates, but one can be animist without being a shaman.
Animism Characteristics:
- Nature: Worldview and belief system
- Practitioner: Anyone who holds this worldview
- Method: Perception, relationship, respect
- Purpose: Living in right relationship with all beings
- Focus: Worldview, daily life, relationships
- Scope: Universal way of being in the world
Animism is the "worldview of aliveness"—seeing and relating to the world as fully alive and conscious.
Key Differences Between Shamanism and Animism
1. Practice vs Worldview
Shamanism:
- Specific spiritual practice
- Techniques and methods
- Active engagement with spirits
- Specialized role
- Something you do
Animism:
- Fundamental worldview
- Way of perceiving reality
- Relational understanding
- Universal perspective
- Something you believe/perceive
2. Who Practices/Believes
Shamanism:
- Specific individuals (shamans)
- Requires training and calling
- Not everyone is a shaman
- Specialized role in community
- Often hereditary or chosen by spirits
Animism:
- Entire community or culture
- Shared worldview
- Everyone participates
- Cultural perspective
- Learned from childhood
3. Focus and Purpose
Shamanism:
- Healing illness
- Divination and prophecy
- Soul retrieval
- Psychopomp work (guiding dead)
- Mediating with spirits
- Community spiritual needs
Animism:
- Living in right relationship
- Respecting all beings
- Reciprocity with nature
- Honoring spirits of place
- Daily reverence
- Ecological harmony
4. Methods and Techniques
Shamanism:
- Drumming and rhythmic sound
- Dancing and movement
- Plant medicines (culture-specific)
- Fasting and isolation
- Trance and altered states
- Spirit journeying
Animism:
- Offerings and gifts
- Speaking to spirits
- Asking permission
- Gratitude and reciprocity
- Respectful behavior
- Daily acknowledgment
5. Relationship
Shamanism and Animism often coexist:
- Shamanism operates within animist worldview
- Shamans are specialists in animist culture
- Animism is the context, shamanism is the practice
- Can have animism without shamanism
- Shamanism assumes animist understanding
Traditional Shamanic Cultures
Siberian Shamanism:
- Origin of the word "shaman" (Tungus: šamán)
- Drumming and ecstatic trance
- Three-world cosmology (upper, middle, lower)
- Animal spirit helpers
Mongolian Shamanism:
- Tengerism (sky worship)
- Ancestor veneration
- Nature spirits (ongon)
- Healing and divination
Native American Traditions:
- Diverse practices across tribes
- Medicine people, not always called "shamans"
- Vision quests
- Sweat lodges
- Plant medicines (peyote, tobacco - sacred, not recreational)
Amazonian Shamanism:
- Ayahuasca ceremonies
- Plant spirit medicine
- Curanderos and ayahuasceros
- Rainforest spirits
Korean Shamanism (Muism):
- Mudang (shamans, often women)
- Gut (shamanic rituals)
- Possession and channeling
- Ancestor communication
Animist Worldviews
Indigenous Animism:
- Found in indigenous cultures worldwide
- Everything has spirit/consciousness
- Kinship with all beings
- Reciprocal relationships
Shinto (Japan):
- Kami (spirits) in all things
- Sacred nature
- Shrines at sacred sites
- Ritual purity
Many Pagan Traditions:
- Modern paganism often animist
- Nature spirits and land wights
- Everything alive and conscious
- Respectful relationship with nature
Core Shamanism and Neo-Shamanism
Core Shamanism:
- Developed by Michael Harner
- Extracted "universal" shamanic techniques
- Removed cultural context
- Accessible to Westerners
- Controversial (cultural appropriation concerns)
Neo-Shamanism:
- Modern Western adaptation
- Draws from multiple cultures
- Often lacks cultural grounding
- Workshops and weekend trainings
- Distinct from traditional shamanism
Important Distinctions:
- Traditional shamanism is culture-specific
- Core/neo-shamanism is modern Western creation
- Not equivalent to indigenous practice
- Cultural appropriation concerns
- Respect for source cultures essential
Modern Animism
New Animism:
- Scholarly and philosophical movement
- Recognizing personhood of non-humans
- Ecological and relational
- Not appropriating indigenous beliefs
- Rediscovering animist perception
Bioregional Animism:
- Relating to spirits of your own land
- Not borrowing from other cultures
- Developing relationship with local nature
- Respectful and place-based
Cultural Appropriation Concerns
Problematic Practices:
- Calling yourself "shaman" without cultural authority
- Using sacred medicines outside cultural context
- Commercializing indigenous practices
- "Playing Indian" or wearing regalia
- Taking from closed practices
Respectful Approaches:
- Learn from your own ancestral traditions
- Develop relationship with your own land
- Support indigenous communities
- Don't claim titles that aren't yours
- Acknowledge sources and limitations
- Practice bioregional animism
Can You Practice Both?
It depends on what you mean:
Traditional Context:
- Shamans in indigenous cultures are animists
- Animism is the worldview, shamanism is the practice
- They naturally coexist
Modern Western Context:
- You can adopt animist worldview (respectfully)
- Calling yourself "shaman" is problematic without cultural authority
- Can practice spirit work without appropriating
- Can be animist without being shaman
Ethical Practice for Non-Indigenous People
What You Can Do:
- Adopt animist worldview and perception
- Develop relationship with spirits of your land
- Study your own ancestral traditions
- Practice respectful spirit work
- Learn from teachers with cultural authority (if invited)
- Support indigenous communities
What to Avoid:
- Claiming shamanic title without cultural basis
- Appropriating sacred ceremonies
- Using indigenous regalia or symbols
- Commercializing borrowed practices
- Disrespecting source cultures
Which Approach is Right for You?
Embrace Animism if you:
- Want to see the world as alive
- Seek respectful relationship with nature
- Want to honor all beings
- Are drawn to ecological spirituality
- Want accessible, non-appropriative practice
- Seek daily spiritual perspective
Study Shamanism if you:
- Have cultural connection to shamanic tradition
- Are invited by indigenous teachers
- Want to understand indigenous spirituality (respectfully)
- Are called to spirit work (find appropriate training)
- Understand cultural context and respect
Animist Practice (Accessible to All)
- Greet trees, rivers, mountains as persons
- Ask permission before taking from nature
- Leave offerings of gratitude
- Speak to spirits of your home and land
- Acknowledge the aliveness of all things
- Practice reciprocity and respect
- Develop relationship with local nature spirits
Final Thoughts
Shamanism and animism are related but distinct concepts within indigenous spirituality. Shamanism is a specific spiritual practice involving altered states, spirit journeying, and mediation between worlds—a specialized role requiring training, calling, and cultural context. Animism is a worldview that perceives all things as alive, conscious, and deserving of respect—a way of being in the world that anyone can adopt.
For most non-indigenous people, animism offers an accessible, respectful path to spiritual relationship with nature and the more-than-human world. You don't need to appropriate indigenous shamanic practices to develop meaningful spirit relationships—you can honor the spirits of your own land, adopt an animist worldview, and practice respectful reciprocity with all beings.
If you're drawn to shamanic practice, seek out teachers with legitimate cultural authority, understand the cultural context, and be honest about what you're practicing (spirit work, not traditional shamanism). Most importantly, approach all indigenous spiritual traditions with deep respect, support indigenous communities, and never commercialize or appropriate what doesn't belong to you.
Whether you're adopting an animist worldview or studying shamanic traditions respectfully, remember: these are living practices belonging to real people and cultures. Honor them, learn from them with permission, and walk your path with integrity and respect.