Description
#56997
Inuit Art: Dancing Shaman
Artist: Clifford mannilaq
Size: 5 1/2” long, 6″ high, 2 1/2” wide
Community: Taloyoak Year: 1991 Stone: Serpentine
Shamans (anatquq or angakkuq in the Inuit languages of northern parts of Alaska and Canada[42]) played an important role in the religion of Inuit acting as religious leaders, tradesmen, healers, and characters in cultural stories holding mysterious, powerful, and sometimes superhuman abilities. The idea of calling shamans “medicine men” is an outdated concept born from the accounts of early explorers and trappers who grouped all shamans together into this bubble. The term “medicine man” does not give the shamans justice and causes misconceptions about their dealings and actions.[43] Despite the fact they are almost always considered healers, this is not the complete extent of their duties and abilities and detaches them from their role as a mediator between normal humans and the world of spirits, animals, and souls for the traditional Inuit.
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