(8) WESTON LA BARRE –
THE GHOST DANCE: THE ORIGINS OF RELIGION (1970)
A sweeping “psychoanalytic account of the birth of religion through the lens of his treatment of the ghost dance religion of native America”.
A sadly elusive and overlooked classic, particularly as anthropologist Weston La Barre regarded it as his magnum opus.
It’s also deliciously snarky, particularly about founding religious figures and classical philosophies.
Essentially, he presents all religion – not just native American – as shamanic in nature. All religions are ghost dances at heart. Indeed, this book led me to see the Bible as the Hebrew dreaming and the great messianic ghost dance.
Don’t get me wrong – I have a soft spot for the ghost dance, both the historical native American ghost dance and its metaphors. Hell – I usually feel my life has been one long ghost dance…
RATING: 4 STARS****
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