Review: Dreamtime & Inner Space: The World of the Shaman by Holger Kalweit

This book may be called a companion piece to Kalweit’s Shamans, Healers and Medicine Men (see my review), and explores how different tribes across the world, from Australia’s WarumunguΒ to Panama’s Guna, view death (afterlife), mortality and soul, and how shamanic rituals, including initiation ceremonies, provide evidence for the communality of all human knowledge and experience. This is a clear, lucid account that provides as much depth as it does breadth.

There is a whole chapter on the helping spirits and protective deities of the shaman, and another on the experience of β€œlight” that signals entry to another dimension. I particularly liked the idea here of β€œsensory poverty” playing the leading role in achieving higher levels of consciousness: β€œloneliness, uniform landscapes, monotonous behaviour…a meditative state of mind…are prerequisites for higher states of consciousness” [Kalweit, Shambhala Publications: 117]. However, given the title of the book, I also expected more information on shamanic dreamworlds, and on the nature and role of dreams and consciousness levels in the shamanic tradition.

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