Sem vso noč lutal v krogu: simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Slovenian |
Veröffentlicht: |
Ljubljana
Znanstvenoraziskovalni Center Slovenske Akad. Znanosti in Umetnosti [u.a.]
2013
|
Schriftenreihe: | Studia mythologica Slavica
Supplementa ; 7 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Abstract |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverz. u. Linksammlung S. 191 - 216 |
Beschreibung: | 232 S. |
ISBN: | 9789612546441 |
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100 | 1 | |a Mencej, Mirjam |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Sem vso noč lutal v krogu |b simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi |c Mirjam Mencej |
246 | 1 | 3 | |a I was wandering in circles the whole night long |
264 | 1 | |a Ljubljana |b Znanstvenoraziskovalni Center Slovenske Akad. Znanosti in Umetnosti [u.a.] |c 2013 | |
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490 | 1 | |a Studia mythologica Slavica : Supplementa |v 7 | |
500 | |a Literaturverz. u. Linksammlung S. 191 - 216 | ||
546 | |a Inhaltsverz. in slowen. u. engl. Sprache. - Zsfassung in engl. Sprache m.d.T.: I was wandering in circles the whole night long. The Symbolism of Circular Movement in European Traditional Culture | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | KAZALO
Uvod
..............................................................................................................................11
NADNARAVNA BITJA
.................................................................................................17
Nadnaravna bitja prisilijo ljudi
v krožno
gibanje
...................................................17
Nadnaravna bitja se sama krožno gibajo
.................................................................19
Ples vkrogu
..............................................................................................................19
Zračni vrtinec
..........................................................................................................21
Vodni vrtinec
...........................................................................................................24
DUŠE UMRLIH
...............................................................................................................25
Zračni vrtinec
..............................................................................................................25
Vodni vrtinec
...............................................................................................................26
TRADICIJSKE EVROPSKE PREDSTAVE
O MEJNEM
PROSTORU MED
SVETOVOMA ŽIVIH
IN
MRTVIH
................................................................27
Vodni vrtinec
...............................................................................................................27
Mlin
...............................................................................................................................30
Kolo
...............................................................................................................................31
Vreteno
..........................................................................................................................31
Ples vkrogu
..................................................................................................................32
Krožne
stopnice
...........................................................................................................33
Vrtečasekoča
..............................................................................................................34
SIMBOLIKA VRETENA, PREDENJA,
PREJE IN NITI
.........................................37
Nadnaravna bitja predejo
...........................................................................................38
Duše umrlih predejo
...................................................................................................44
Nit
kot most
na drugi svet
.........................................................................................45
Predenje, nit
in rojstvo
................................................................................................47
Spředena
nit
in »učlovečenje«
....................................................................................50
Nit
in usoda
..................................................................................................................51
Predenje
in
smrt
..........................................................................................................55
Simbolika predenja
kot krožnega
gibanja
................................................................60
PREPOVED PREDENJA
V
TEKU LETA
...................................................................63
Obdobja prepovedi predenja
v teku
letnega ciklusa
..............................................69
Nadzornice prepovedi predenja
................................................................................75
Kazni za kršitev prepovedi predenja
.........................................................................82
Prepoved predenja
v teku
življenjskega ciklusa
......................................................85
Interpretacije tabujev predenja..................................................................................
86
Simbolika prepovedi predenja
...................................................................................88
OBREDI OBKROŽANJA
...............................................................................................91
Omejitev in prilastitev
prostora
................................................................................93
Prevzem in
demonstracija oblasti nad obkroženim prostorom
...........................96
Obnavljanje
meja
zaradi zaščite prostora
................................................................98
Zavarovanje svetosti prostora
..................................................................................105
SIMBOLIKA
SMERI
KROŽNEGA GIBANJA
........................................................111
Simbolika
smeri
gibanja glede na gibanje Sonca
..................................................112
Simbolika
smeri
gibanja glede na gibanje
v
desno
-
levo
...................................119
Pomen vloge
smeri
gibanja glede na Cerkev
.........................................................127
SIMBOLIZEM
KROŽNEGA GIBANJA
V
OBREDIH
..........................................131
KROŽENJE
KOT
TEHNIKA KOMUNIKACIJE
Z
ONIM SVETOM
V
TRADICIJSKIH MAGIJSKIH PRAKSAH
...................................................139
Vedeževanje
................................................................................................................139
Zdravilski obredi
.......................................................................................................141
Plodnostna magija
.....................................................................................................142
Klicanje duhov
in onstranskih
bitij
........................................................................143
KROŽNO GIBANJE
KOT
TEHNIKA PROFESIONALNIH
MEDIATORJEV MED SVETOVOMA
..........................................................145
Šamanizem
.................................................................................................................146
Šamanizem Evenkov (Tungusov)
.......................................................................146
Šamanizem Nanajcev
...........................................................................................149
Šamanizem Oročijev
............................................................................................150
Šamanizem Saamijev
............................................................................................151
Volhvi
..........................................................................................................................153
Volkodlaki
.................................................................................................................154
Srednjeevropski šamanizem
....................................................................................164
Plesivkrogu
................................................................................................................174
Izventelesna potovanja
.............................................................................................176
KROŽNO GIBANJE
KOT
ODSEV SPREMENJENEGA STANJA ZAVESTI....
179
Obsmrtne izkušnje
....................................................................................................180
Druge izkušnje spremenjenega stanja zavesti
.......................................................182
Zakrjuček
........................................................................................................................185
Literatura
.........................................................................................................................191
Internetni viri
.............................................................................................................216
Indeks
..............................................................................................................................217
Summary
.........................................................................................................................223
I WAS WANDERING IN CIRCLES THE
WHOLE NIGHT LONG
THE SYMBOLISM OF CIRCULAR MOVEMENT IN
EUROPEAN TRADITIONAL CULTURE
CONTENTS
Introduction
.................................................................................................................11
SUPERNATURAL BEINGS
..........................................................................................17
Supernatural Beings Make People Move in Circles
...............................................17
Supernatural Beings Move in Circles
........................................................................19
Ring Dance
...............................................................................................................19
Whirlwind
...............................................................................................................21
Whirlpool
................................................................................................................24
SOULS OF THE DEAD
..................................................................................................25
Whirlwind
....................................................................................................................25
Whirlpool
.....................................................................................................................26
TRADITIONAL EUROPEAN NOTIONS ABOUT LIMINAL SPACE
BETWEEN THE WORLD OF THE LIVING AND THE WORLD
OF THE DEAD
.....................................................................................................27
Whirlpool
.....................................................................................................................27
Mill
................................................................................................................................30
Wheel
............................................................................................................................31
Spindle
..........................................................................................................................31
Ring dance
...................................................................................................................32
Spiral
Stairs
..................................................................................................................33
Spinning hut
.................................................................................................................34
SYMBOLISM OF A SPINDLE, SPINNING, SPINNING MATERIAL
AND THREAD
....................................................................................................37
Supernatural Beings Spinning
...................................................................................38
Souls of the Dead Spinning
.......................................................................................44
Thread as a Bridge to the Otherworld
......................................................................45
Spinning, Thread and Birth
.......................................................................................47
Spun Thread and Turning Human
........................................................................50
Thread and Fate
...........................................................................................................51
Spinning and Death
....................................................................................................55
Symbolism of Spinning as a Circular Movement
...................................................60
TABOOS ON SPINNING IN ANNUAL CYCLE
.....................................................63
Periods of Spinning Taboos in Annual Cycle
.........................................................69
Supernatural Supervisor of Spinning Taboos
.........................................................75
Punishment for Breaking Taboos on Spinning
.......................................................82
Taboos on Spinning in Life Cycle
.............................................................................85
Interpretations of Taboos on Spinning
....................................................................86
Symbolism of Taboos on Spinning
..........................................................................88
CIRCUMAMBULATION RITUALS
..........................................................................91
Symbolic Demarcation and Claiming of Land
.......................................................93
Seizing and Demonstration of Authority over Territory
.......................................96
Protection of an Area
.................................................................................................98
Ensuring of the Sanctity of an Area
.......................................................................105
SYMBOLISM OF DIRECTION OF CIRCULAR MOVEMENT
..........................
Ill
Symbolism of the Direction Regarding the Movement of the Sun
....................112
Symbolism of the Direction Regarding Movement to Right or Left
..................119
Symbolism of the Direction Regarding the Church
.............................................127
SYMBOLISM OF CIRCULAR MOVEMENT IN RITUAL
CIRCUMAMBULATION
................................................................................131
CIRCULAR MOVEMENT AS A TECHNIQUE OF COMMUNICATION
WITH THE OTHERWORLD IN TRADITIONAL MAGICAL
PRACTICES
........................................................................................................139
Soothsaying
................................................................................................................139
Healing Practices
.......................................................................................................141
Fertility Magic
...........................................................................................................142
Summoning of Ghosts and Supernatural Beings
.................................................143
CIRCULAR MOVEMENT AS A TECHNIQUE OF PROFESSIONAL
MEDIATORS BETWEEN THE TWO WORLDS
.......................................145
Shamanism
.................................................................................................................146
Evenk s Shamanism
..............................................................................................146
Nanay Shamanism
................................................................................................149
Orochi Shamanism
...............................................................................................150
Saami Shamanism
................................................................................................151
Volhvs
..........................................................................................................................153
Werewolves
.................................................................................................................154
Central European Shamanism
................................................................................164
Round Dances
.............................................................................................................174
Out-of-Body-Experiences
........................................................................................176
CIRCULAR MOVEMENT AS A REFLECTION OF ALTERED STATE
OF CONSCIOUSNESS
......................................................................................179
Near-Death-Experiences
..........................................................................................180
Other Experiences of Altered State of Consciousness
.........................................182
Conclusion
......................................................................................................................185
Literature
.........................................................................................................................191
Index
................................................................................................................................217
Summary
.........................................................................................................................223
SUMMARY
I WAS WANDERING IN CIRCLES THE WHOLE NIGHT LONG.
THE SYMBOLISM OF CIRCULAR MOVEMENT IN EUROPEAN TRADI¬
TIONAL CULTURE.
The aim of this book is to show that according to traditional European concep¬
tions about space, the border between the world of the living and the world of the
dead was marked by circular movement, and that the transition between this world
and the other was possible through circular movement. Circular movement is one
of the key concepts to the understanding of numerous widespread European beliefs,
rituals and practices which imply communication between the two worlds.
Circular movement is connected with various supernatural beings, their way
of moving, the influence they have on people (making people walk in circles) etc.
Throughout the whole of Europe one finds numerous beliefs about supernatural
beings (especially fairies and witches) dancing in circles, and a whirlwind, i.e. wind
whirling in a circular way, often stands for an embodiment of supernatural beings.
Travelling through the air in a whirlwind was also common to fairies and witches.
Furthermore, whirlpools, places where water circles, are also standard locations
filled with supernatural beings. In general, the circular motion is an important dif¬
ferentiating characteristic of nonhuman entities in comparison to movement in the
human world, which is manifested through binary principles: forward/backwards,
up/down, left/right.
There are also plenty of records of belief that relate the souls of the dead to cir¬
cular, whirling motion. According to folk belief narratives the soul after having left
the body in the moment of death often circles around the air before it leaves for the
other world. The circular movement of the souls on their way to the other world can
also be found in beliefs about whirlwinds conveying souls of the suicides. Circular
movement in this or some other form therefore appears to be related to supernatural
beings, to souls in their passage between the worlds and the souls of the unclean
dead who are stuck in the liminal space between the worlds. What unites them all is
clearly their status: the fact that they alternate between this and the other world, have
either an ability to communicate with the world of the dead or dwell in the liminal
space between the world of the living and that of the dead.
To understand the connection between circular movement and supernatu¬
ral beings (as well as souls) it is first necessary to look at the conceptions of space
found in European folk beliefs and language. In Slavic languages, words indicating
223
a whirlpool or a pool (vortex, locus fluminus profundis) stand for the path to
the world of the dead and at the same time for a place where the souls of the dead
abide. While the meaning of these words in Slavic languages may vary from pool to
whirlpool, there are many additional indications for the vortex (whirlpool) with its
circular waters being an entrance to the other world in other Indo-European tradi¬
tions. Other symbols of circular movement, marking a transition and liminal space
between this and the otherworld, such as mill (Scandinavian) and wheel (Greenland),
spindle (Greek), round dances and spiral stairs (Christian texts) and whirling hut
(Russian fairy tales), appear in various European traditions too.
But looking at European traditional culture in general, not just at folk concep¬
tions about the liminal space between the worlds, it seems that the spindle acquired
the most comprehensive and wide-ranging meaning of all the circular symbols indi¬
cating the liminal space. In the European tradition the spindle, and also the activities
related to it, i.e. spinning, spinning materials and thread, are closely related to the
symbolic transition between the worlds. This undoubtedly has to do with the role of
women as spinsters and as generators of new life, however, the key to the develop¬
ment of the symbolism of spinning is the fact that unspun material has to be made
into thread through the circular movement of fingers, a spindle or a spinning-wheel.
Thread, yarn, and spinning are also related to supernatural beings, who often
spin or carry a ball of thread, and the souls of the dead, especially the restless dead.
According to a belief in the French countryside, the souls of the dead returned at
night in search of a thread or worked on spinning wheels, in Slovenia the souls of
the dead spin or appear in the form of a ball of thread or wound wool.
Representations of thread (and spinning) as a link between the worlds of the
living and the dead do not appear only implicitly in beliefs about supernatural beings
and the restless dead, but can also be seen in Indo-European notions of a bridge that
leads to the other world, which is frequently depicted in the form of thread that souls
cross on their way to the other world. Children, who according to traditional beliefs
are born to our world from the other world, according to certain beliefs also arrive
from there by thread: God lowered you on a thread, are parents responses to their
children s questions about where they came from in Belarus.
In the context of spinning the relationship between living in this or the other
world can be symbolised as the opposition between unspun wool and spun thread.
The image of the wool-basket has already been interpreted as a symbolic womb and
the un-spun wool in the basket as a piece of textile that is not yet made or a person
who is not yet born or fully made. One often comes across the allegorical image of
the mother-as-a-distaif together with that of the child-as-the-yarn-on-a-spindle
in folklore which obviously refers to a symbolic connection between thread and body
tissue; in traditional symbolism to spin and to weave means to create body tissue. The
224
symbolism of spinning continues even in the Christian iconography of the Virgin
Mary, as well as that of Eve.
In the same way that the skin is wrapped around the spindle of a body, fate was
also considered to be wrapped around a person
-
the Greeks conceived fate and
phases of fortune (such as misfortune, marriage, age, disease, death etc.) as threads
spun by gods or fates and given by the deities to a man as a wreath of wool, a thread,
a bond. In many places, the thread of life is a symbol of man s fate. Throughout
Europe, as well as among the
Hittites
and in Anatolia, we find beliefs in supernatural
beings and deities who spin and through their spinning decide the fate of a new-born
child. Conceptions of supernatural beings, who spin the thread of life, are found in
the oldest philosophical texts as well as in more recent folklore. In representations
from antiquity, the Greek Moirae and Roman Parcae were spinners and the asso¬
ciation between the Fates and spinning is also attested in modern Greek folklore
as well as in folklore about Fates of many European peoples
-
Slovene rojenice or
sojenice,
Macedonian and Bulgarian orisnice,
narečnice
and
rečenice,
Croatian and
Serbian sudjenice,
sudice,
usude, sudjaje, rođenice,
Chechian and Slovakian
sudičke,
Romanian Ursitoarea, Soartea, and
Moartea,
Latvian
Láimas
all spin and at the same
time decide the fate of the new-borns.
The relation between life and death in the context of the symbolism of thread and
spinning can be recognised in language, too. Slovene sayings directly connect thread
with the end of life or death: to cut or break the thread of life (figuratively: to cause
death), his life is hanging by a thread (figuratively: his life is severely threatened,
he is very ill). The meaning to be dead , to die has similar expressions in French,
such as to be at the end of your roll , to be at the end of the length of your ball of
thread , and in Greek: his spindle is wound full , his thread is cut or his thread
is finished . All these language expressions indicate the belief that the Fates appor¬
tion to each man at birth a mass of rough wool from which they go on spinning day
by day till the thread of life is completed.
Just as a baby is born with a thread wound around the spindle of its body, it also
leaves this world wound in thread. A winding-sheet or strip of cloth to wrap around
one is closely related to a cord or a coil which is wrapped around the corpse in a spiral,
just like thread around a spindle. When the spinning stops, death ensues. Death is
therefore a process of drying or unwinding the thread of life from the spindle of the
body, or spine. In the light of this symbolism, the process of life can be understood
as spinning threads from unprocessed yarn and its winding, which begins at birth
and lasts until death, until the spindle of the person s body is full and the spinning is
done. At this point the reverse process begins: the thread begins to unwind, unravel,
and finally decays once again into unspun wool. This can further clarify the custom,
widespread in South-Eastern Europe, of laying yarn, unspun wool, unprocessed cloth
225
(although sometimes also pieces of cloth or even clothing) on graves
-
thus symboli¬
cally that to which the souls of the dead return and turn into. The notion that death
means the beginning of the unravelling of the thread from the spindle of the human
body could also explain the symbolism of the unravelling of balls of wool or thread
in funereal rituals and throwing them at places of death in northern Moldavia.
According to the traditional European conceptions, spinning, the material for
spinning (fibres
-
un-spun wool) and the results of this activity (thread, yarn) there¬
fore bear important symbolic meanings related to the basic aspects of human exist¬
ence
-
birth, fate and death. Spinning is a means of entering and exiting this world,
moreover, it marks the connection between the world of the living and the world of
the dead in various ways
-
it indicates the transition, the link and the liminal space
between the two worlds. There are many possible reasons for thread and spinning
acquiring such a symbolic function, but the main reason lies in the fact that spin¬
ning always involves circular movement. Spinning, or thread, as a result of circular
movement during the process of spinning, is related to supernatural beings and the
souls of the dead precisely because the circular movement required for spinning is
also characteristic of the liminal space between the two worlds where they dwell. The
role of thread as a link between the worlds is therefore not accidental; it connects both
worlds precisely because it is itself a result of circular movement, i.e. the movement
that is characteristic of a liminal space.
The fact that spinning was symbolically understood as an action which allows
for communication between the two worlds also had important consequences for
the annual and life cycle. The taboo on spinning in the course of the annual cycle of
holidays is particularly important for the understanding of the symbolism of circular
movement in general.
If we ignore individual expressly local saints on whose feast days spinning is
forbidden for one reason or another, one of the periods during which taboos on spin¬
ning are most widespread throughout Europe is the Christmas period. This period
can undoubtedly be understood as a turning point in the year, a time of the intru¬
sion of the Otherworld. Another period, during which a strict taboo on spinning
was most widespread in Europe, was Carnival, another turning point in the annual
cycle. Some of the other holidays when spinning is forbidden, also mark the begin¬
ning of spring and the end of winter. All holidays in which we encounter a taboo on
spinning in European rituals of the annual cycle therefore have the characteristic
of a turning point in the year, a dividing line between the old and the new year,
winter and spring, a rupture which implies the intrusion of the Otherworld
-
the
appearance of the souls of the dead, which are represented as masked mummers,
witches, demonic or supernatural beings etc. In addition to taboos on spinning in the
annual cycle of holidays we also occasionally encounter taboos on spinning during
226
the course of the life cycle, e.g. at birth and at the time of death, especially in Slavic
traditional culture, but also elsewhere. We can therefore see that the period of taboos
on spinning during the life cycle, i.e. at death, when the dead are still not completely
in the other world (according to traditional belief the soul arrives in the Otherworld
only on the 40th day after death), and at birth, i.e. up to
40
days after birth (in other
words during the period when the child is still not completely born , when they are
still somehow between the worlds of the living and the dead), semantically entirely
conforms with the periods during the course of the annual cycle: these are liminal
periods in which the boundaries between the worlds are fluid and easily moved, and
in which communication between the worlds is unobstructed.
People justify taboos on spinning in various ways, but in general they relate
to the prevention of deformations of people and animals, calling wild, danger¬
ous or harmful animals, prevention of household misfortune and prevention of
inclement weather. In addition the taboo on spinning prevents death in the wider
sense or contact with it
/
the dead (the eyes of the deceased from becoming dirty,
the dead from returning after death, one from spinning a funeral shroud or a
thread which would someday be used to hang a child. James G. Frazer and Paul
Saintyves understood these taboos in the context of imitative (homeopathic) magic.
However, apart from some, many other explanations of taboos would be difficult
to interpret on the basis of sympathetic or homeopathic magic: inclement weather,
the appearance of harmful or wild animals, misfortune involving animals and
people, misfortune for the linen, calling death etc. The key reason for the fact that
spinning is forbidden at certain times of the annual or life cycle is again precisely
the fact that spinning always involves circular movement: of a spinning wheel, a
spindle or of the thread itself. Therefore it is no surprise that during periods when
spinning is forbidden; often it is not just spinning that is forbidden, but the turning
of any kind of wheel. If the spinning, circular movement of the thread, spinning
wheel or spindle is a way to enter the otherworld, we can understand this taboo
as a preventative measure for not bringing death into this world during the time
when the door to the other world is open. This explains also the interpretations
of the taboos which warn against spinning because of misfortunes in general and
because of calling death: deformed children, animals with crooked necks and legs,
crooked vegetation, beasts and snakes are representatives of the other world or have
a connotation of the otherworld.
However, while circular movement was considered dangerous and forbidden
in certain periods of the annual and life cycle, as we have seen in case of spinning,
in the course of annual cycle one also encounters circular movement, that is, on the
contrary, much desired and needed in the community. I am referring here to the
circumambulation rituals which are considered important for the community.
227
In traditional European culture we find various types of circumambulation ritu¬
als which are carried out by the entire community and which are part of the annual
holiday cycle or are performed as needed. The main forms of circumambulation
rituals are walking around (or crawling or walking on one s knees), ploughing, riding
around and girding a certain object or place. Four basic functions can be recognised in
these rituals: symbolic demarcation and claiming of land, seizing and demonstration
of authority over territory, protection of an area and ensuring the sanctity of an area.
In
(Indo-)
European languages and records of belief, the direction of a person s
movement during a ritual of circumambulation in the direction of the apparent
motion of the sun is generally understood to be that which is considered positive,
which brings good luck, plenty and fertility, while movement in the opposite direction
to the apparent motion of the sun is understood as negative, unlucky, as that which
brings death, misfortune and harm. The sun appears to move around the earth as
its centre, in spatial terms it therefore moves to the right, or in other words, from
left to right or from the east towards the south, and then towards the west and the
north, i.e. clockwise. The Catholic Church adopted sunwise movement, i.e. from left
to right from the perspective of an external observer, in its liturgy, while the opposite
direction to that understood as positive in European traditional beliefs and in the
Catholic liturgy is used in the liturgy of the Orthodox Church, which clearly also
influenced folk rituals in Orthodox countries, for instance in Greece, Russia and the
Balkans, in which circling rituals and dances are performed in the opposite direction
to the apparent motion of the sun, i.e. from right to left, and not from left to right.
However, both orientations are motivated according to the motion of the sun, except
that in the Catholic liturgy they follow the motion of the sun, while in the Orthodox
Church they move opposite to the sun, i.e. facing the sun, meeting the sun . The
crucial aspect is therefore orientation with respect to the sun (to the right), which is
understood as positive, the one which ensures fertility, health, plenty, and life. On
the other hand, movement in the opposite direction to the apparent motion of the
sun (movement to the left) was associated with bad fortune, magic, death and the
invoking of evil powers, infertility and the deterrence of new life.
Angela
Della Volpe
argues that the ritual of circumambulation actually stems
from the ritual worship of the ancestors and the cult of fire; originally it was per¬
formed around the domestic hearth, which represents the Sun on Earth, where the
ancestors used to be buried. Later, when the burial place was transferred first to
the household and then to the nearby fields, the ritual of circumambulation was
performed around the households and fields respectively. Circular movement can
thus be understood as a way of making a connection with the otherworld, from
where everything people wish for
-
fertility, health, etc.
-
originates and from where
people can influence the life of a soul after death. Girding, walking around, riding or
228
ploughing in circle as a form of circular movement allow contact with the otherworld
because the circular movement imitates the path of the soul on its way from this world
to the otherworld at death and back again at birth. Thus in traditional customs of
circumambulation, even though they emphasise the function of dividing, making
of a borderline between this and that world, the sacred and the profane, an apparent
opposite function can be identified: the one that allows people to communicate with
the otherworld through circular movement.
This becomes clear in Indo-European customs of accepting a new-born child
into a community by spinning it around a hearth
-
since according to traditional
conceptions a baby is born to this world from the otherworld, it is precisely the
circular movement that allows the passage. In the same way, through a funeral
procession s circular movement around a dead body, a grave, a pyre or a graveyard,
the dead are led from this world to the other. The aim of these customs is to assure
the safe passage of the soul from this world to the otherworld and vice versa and, in
a wider sense, the communication between the worlds in general. Round or spiral
dances within the framework of funeral customs also had an important function in
the accompaniment of the soul to the other world.
If circular movement is a way of communication with the other world, then we
might expect to find it as a technique used for entering into the other world in tra¬
ditional magic practices, when the entrance to the other world is necessary. In fact
many traditional circular practices imply some sort of circular movement.
Divinatory rituals, for instance, often require some sort of circular movement:
walking three times around the fire on the evening of St. John s day, sweeping
around the base of the corn stack with a broom, encircling the church and similar
are intended to make the future husband or wife appear, or predict the future in the
coming year. Circular movement is also used infertility magic, the purpose of which
is to summon the souls of children from the world of the dead, and in healing ritu¬
als when circumambulations around wells and temples or churches are common.
Through circumambulation, turning or any sort of circular movement a person can
also summon otherworldly beings, i.e. ghosts, spirits, fairies, the Devil etc. In his paper,
Menefee claims that circling practices were designed to open an entrance between
the practitioners and the otherworld, and he finds circumambulation a manner of
unscrewing the barrier between the natural, ordinary world and the supernatural
(1985).
Circular movement may be found in Siberian and Arctic shamanic
séances
which implicate the entry of the shaman into the other world, i.e. the journey of his
soul to the otherworld, either during an ecstasy or without it. Although we cannot
find a great deal of data on the ancient Russian shamans from the 11th and 12th
centuries, called volhvy, the existing data indicates that circular movement was also
229
a key element of their ecstatic rituals. Volhvy achieved ecstatic states through ecstatic
spinning dances, after which they fell into a state of physical exhaustion and torpor,
and then they were able to soothsay. Circular movement as a technique for reaching
a state of ecstasy is perhaps most clearly demonstrated in the whirling dance of the
dervishes, the members of the Mevlevi Order, whose psychological exaltation of the
trance state is similar to the ecstasies of shamans.
If circular movement can be understood as a sort of technique which induces
altered state of consciousness (ASC), it could shed light on numerous European
folk legends about werewolves. The ASC states of shamans are generally labelled as
involving soul flight, journeys to the otherworld, and
/
or transformation into animals.
As Claude Lecouteux argues, the roots of European beliefs about werewolves could
in fact have arisen from shamanic conceptions of the soul: the transformations of
werewolves were not thought to be a metamorphosis of the body, but of a double.
According to European traditional beliefs, man had a double (alter ego, soul), which
when separated from the body would roam about in the shape of an animal and the
metamorphoses of the double gradually fixed on the wolf, although at the begin¬
ning the double could appear in various animal forms. This way, werewolves would
actually be people whose doubles could roam around in the shape of a wolf (or an
animal)
-
in other words, people who were capable of reaching a state of ecstasy,
i.e. sending the double/soul out of the body, and therefore being a sort of mediator
with the other world. If circular movement can be understood as a technique for
achieving ecstasy or communication with the other world, and if werewolves can be
understood as ecstasy specialists or a type of shaman that was able to communicate
with the other world by sending their soul in the form of an animal out of the body,
then it is not surprising that in European folk legends in addition to other, better
known methods of transforming into a wolf (e.g. wearing wolfskins or belts, applying
a special salve or balm etc.), this could also be triggered by circular movement in any
of its manifestations: rolling, turning somersaults, spinning, running in a circle etc.
The question is, however, why circular movement in all of the above-stated
examples is associated with the journey from one world to the other. One explanation
that might possibly provide an answer to this question is that circular movement is
in some way a reflection of the condition of a person s nervous system at a certain
stage of (achieving the) trance, i.e. the stage which he experiences as a passage to
the otherworld through a whirlpool, which the shaman or any other religious or
magic specialist who achieves that state actually acts out by moving circularly in
their performance. Neuropsychological laboratory research has shown that it is
possible to identify three stages which people go through when falling into a trance.
In the third stage they pass through a descending whirlpool or tunnel, through a
rotating dark space which is defined as tunnel, cave, corridor, pipe, well, spiral, swirl
230
and similar. This experience is usually called a mental vortex. It is one of the most
common experiences in laboratory experiments investigating the effects of stress or
hallucinogens, and often appears in anthropological accounts of shamans and other
religious specialists experiences of ASC. As Clottes and Lewis-Williams point out,
these three stages are universal and are an integral part of the human nervous system,
although each culture ascribes different meanings to them. If the stages of falling
into a trance are stages based in the human nervous system, and shamans therefore
universally experience a certain stage of the trance (i.e. the transition into the
3rd
stage) as a journey through a whirlpool or a tunnel, we can assume that this stage of
their falling into a trance is reflected in the performance through the shaman s circu¬
lar movement (spinning, circling, round dances or running in a circle etc.), through
which he actually enacts or imitates the experience of travelling through a whirlpool.
The shamanic experience of soul journey also shares a common structure and
a biological basis with near-death or clinical death experiences, contemporary out-
of-body experiences, astral projection, contemporary spiritual practices and other
experiences of travelling to the spirit world. Therefore it comes as no surprise that a
mental vortex is also characteristic of near-death experiences.
Judit
Kis-Halas gives a similar description of ecstatic experiences, the so-called
crossing the gates between dimensions : her informants told her that they experi¬
enced the crossing through the gate into the other dimension as moving upwards in
a spiral, lifted by a colourful energy-beam, like in a whirlwind.
On the basis of all of these examples we can see that not just shamans as more
or less professional ecstatics who enter ASC intentionally, but also people who have
experienced ASC and the transition to another reality sometimes unintentionally,
sometimes on purpose, e.g. under the influence of drugs, anaesthetics, during medita¬
tion, dreams etc., share a common element of the experience: travelling to the other
world through
/
as some sort of circular movement.
In the rituals of shamans in the narrow sense of the word, specialists who can
be indirectly associated with shamanism (werewolves), and in descriptions of other
experiences of ASC which occurred unintentionally or intentionally stimulated
with drugs, meditation or special techniques, experiences that happen in dreams
or during temporary periods of death (NDEs), we frequently encounter a common
structural element: circular movement in any of its various forms (whirling, turning,
round dance, running in a circle, turning somersaults, rolling, a journey through a
spiral tunnel, circling etc.). In the book I have tried to show that circular movement
is directly associated with achieving a state of ecstasy and/or with the soul s journey
from one world to the other. One possible explanation for circular movement appear¬
ing so frequently in direct connection with ecstasy and the transition between the
worlds over such a wide area, such a long period of time and in such varied forms of
231
experiencing
ASC
lies in circular movement being a reflection of the human nervous
system at a certain stage of entering into a trance (i.e. on the transition to the third
stage of trance, which is experienced as a passage through a whirlpool or a spiral
tunnel to the other world), as has been confirmed through neuropsychological labora¬
tory research. The knowledge that a sense of circular movement is characteristic of a
certain stage of trance and the transition to the other world (based on people s own
experiences or others narratives), which to some extent probably became a part of
the collective tradition, led to the widespread use of circular movement as a technique
through which a person could achieve a state of ecstasy at any time and/or enter
the other world. This technique thus became a part of magical practice not just by
magic specialists, but also ordinary people who in one way or another attempted to
establish communication with the other world, for example through fortune-telling,
fertility magic and summoning beings from the other world, to mention just a few.
Although it is possible that the technique of using circular movement as an
intentional way of inducing ASC and other appearances of circular movement in folk
legends and magical practices associated with entering the other world came from
such cosmological notions, it seems more likely that the primary source of cosmo-
logical notions such as a whirlpool at the boundary between the worlds of the living
and the dead stems from activities in the human nervous system and not vice versa.
But no matter whether the cosmological notions of various peoples which depict the
transition between the worlds with images that implicate circling, such as e.g. a whirl¬
pool, mill, wheel or spindle, arise from the activities of the human nervous system
or perhaps from observations of the apparent orbiting of the sun and the stars or the
earth s rotation around its axis, as had been stated as well, circular movement is in
every case one of the key concepts in people s communication with the other world.
f
Çayerische
Staatsbibliothek
232 1 München
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Mencej, Mirjam |
author_facet | Mencej, Mirjam |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Mencej, Mirjam |
author_variant | m m mm |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV042205338 |
classification_rvk | LC 41000 MS 6650 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)897306184 (DE-599)OBVAC12069437 |
discipline | Soziologie Sozial-/Kulturanthropologie / Empirische Kulturwissenschaft |
format | Book |
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series | Studia mythologica Slavica |
series2 | Studia mythologica Slavica : Supplementa |
spelling | Mencej, Mirjam Verfasser aut Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi Mirjam Mencej I was wandering in circles the whole night long Ljubljana Znanstvenoraziskovalni Center Slovenske Akad. Znanosti in Umetnosti [u.a.] 2013 232 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Studia mythologica Slavica : Supplementa 7 Literaturverz. u. Linksammlung S. 191 - 216 Inhaltsverz. in slowen. u. engl. Sprache. - Zsfassung in engl. Sprache m.d.T.: I was wandering in circles the whole night long. The Symbolism of Circular Movement in European Traditional Culture Jenseits (DE-588)4028567-4 gnd rswk-swf Diesseits (DE-588)4332222-0 gnd rswk-swf Symbolik (DE-588)4184194-3 gnd rswk-swf Kultur (DE-588)4125698-0 gnd rswk-swf Kreisbewegung (DE-588)4758086-0 gnd rswk-swf Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 gnd rswk-swf Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 g Kultur (DE-588)4125698-0 s Diesseits (DE-588)4332222-0 s Jenseits (DE-588)4028567-4 s Kreisbewegung (DE-588)4758086-0 s Symbolik (DE-588)4184194-3 s DE-604 Studia mythologica Slavica Supplementa ; 7 (DE-604)BV037183149 7 Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 19 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027644134&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 19 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027644134&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Abstract |
spellingShingle | Mencej, Mirjam Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi Studia mythologica Slavica Jenseits (DE-588)4028567-4 gnd Diesseits (DE-588)4332222-0 gnd Symbolik (DE-588)4184194-3 gnd Kultur (DE-588)4125698-0 gnd Kreisbewegung (DE-588)4758086-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4028567-4 (DE-588)4332222-0 (DE-588)4184194-3 (DE-588)4125698-0 (DE-588)4758086-0 (DE-588)4015701-5 |
title | Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi |
title_alt | I was wandering in circles the whole night long |
title_auth | Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi |
title_exact_search | Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi |
title_full | Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi Mirjam Mencej |
title_fullStr | Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi Mirjam Mencej |
title_full_unstemmed | Sem vso noč lutal v krogu simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi Mirjam Mencej |
title_short | Sem vso noč lutal v krogu |
title_sort | sem vso noc lutal v krogu simbolika kroznega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi |
title_sub | simbolika krožnega gibanja v evropski tradicijski kulturi |
topic | Jenseits (DE-588)4028567-4 gnd Diesseits (DE-588)4332222-0 gnd Symbolik (DE-588)4184194-3 gnd Kultur (DE-588)4125698-0 gnd Kreisbewegung (DE-588)4758086-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Jenseits Diesseits Symbolik Kultur Kreisbewegung Europa |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027644134&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027644134&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV037183149 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT mencejmirjam semvsonoclutalvkrogusimbolikakroznegagibanjavevropskitradicijskikulturi AT mencejmirjam iwaswanderingincirclesthewholenightlong |