A MOTHER'S LOVE: GENDER, ALTRUISM, AND SPIRITUAL TRANSFORMATION
Author: Glass-Coffin, Bonnie1
Source: Zygon, Volume 41, Number 4, December 2006 , pp. 893-902(10)
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing
Abstract:
. This article explores the concepts of altruism, spiritual connection, and shamanic healing as practiced by female curanderas in northern Peru. It suggests how coessence rather than transcendence is at the heart of the shamanic journey that both healers and patients embark upon in order to transform suffering. Using ethnographic and case-study research, it describes how the metaphors of maternal care, shared suffering, and compassionate love are used by female healers in this region to shape their patients'understandings of illness and health as well as to construct their own understandings of the shaman's role in their healing process. The healers studied adopt attitudes of acceptance, empathy, spiritual connection, and altruism as integral to their work and encourage their patients to do the same in order to regain a sense of mastery over their own suffering. Parallels are presented between the model of spiritual connection and healing described here and that described by both scholars of feminist theology and feminist spirituality such as Rosemary Radford Ruether and popular lecturers/authors such as Marianne Williamson.Keywords: altruism; gender; motherhood; Peru; Rosemary Radford Ruether; shamanism; spiritual transformation; Marianne Williamson
Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9744.2006.00786.x
Affiliations: 1: Professor of Anthropology at Utah State University, Department of Sociology, Social Work, and Anthropology, Old Main Hill 0730, Logan, UT 84322-0730;, Email: glasscob@cc.usu.edu.

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