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"This book is more than a scholarly, sympathetic, and shrewd guide to the history of Western attempts to understand shamanism and to its ethnopoetic presence in the work of Plato, Robert Graves, Aldous Huxley, and Gary Snyder. It is more than an intelligent commentary on the 'chain of texts' generated by contact with Marcel de Lima's three case studies: Black Elk, María Sabina, and Carlos Castenada's Don Juan. It is a superbly documented and clearly articulated argument for 'parallel modes of knowledge' that dissolves distinctions between scientific and poetic discourses in an attempt to grasp the full potential of the human imagination for a deeper quality of life." - Terry Gifford, Bath Spa University, UK
"Marcel de Lima's book offers an original and fascinating insight into Western literary uses of shamanism from the Romantics through to the ethnopoetics movement of the Sixties and the Castaneda controversy. He brings out theconstant overlapping of ethnographic and literary interests and gives a fine sense of the excitement and challenge of the formal and intellectual experimentation of the Sixties, managing to be both sympathetic and appropriately skeptical. This book is an overdue revisiting of the important debates over ethnopoetics and a penetrating and exciting account of what shamanism has meant to millions of ordinary readers as well as scholars." - David Murray, Professor Emeritus, American and Canadian Studies, University of Nottingham, UK