id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_ktjje554c5httarn6kciytwndq K von Stuckard Reenchanting nature: modern western shamanism and nineteenth-century thought 2002.0 29 .pdf application/pdf 11427 982 62 and Europe a complex phenomenon on the fringes of anthropology, science, and the so-called New Age that is often referred to as "neoshamanism." Part of a larger discourse of nature-based spirituality, contemporary It is shown that the nineteenth century must be considered the formative phase of contemporary neoshamanic nature discourse. the new appreciation of shamanism in modern western culture. having sketched the background and main characteristics of shamanic activities within modern western culture, I now turn to the issue of nature, important features of modern western shamanism's attitudes toward nature. The concepts of radical bioethics and deep ecology contribute significantly to modern western shamanism's attitude toward nature. Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775–1854) and trace its impact on the romantic sacralization of nature, focusing especially on Novalis and the American transcendentalists. The roots of modern western shamanism are to be found in the nineteenth century's philosophy of nature and pantheism, which for their part ./cache/work_ktjje554c5httarn6kciytwndq.pdf ./txt/work_ktjje554c5httarn6kciytwndq.txt