someblackguy
Rising Star
Introduction: A call to Action
Enthoegenic shamanism has been described as a cosmopolitan phenomenon of indigenous medicines and sacred practices that has been identified in various cross-cultural contexts from the shamans of Siberia, Bwiti medicine men in Africa, to the Sadhus of vedic religions, and on to brujos and curanderos of ayahuasca. Broadly speaking the goal of this project is to critically address, describe, and problematize the Western use and appropriation of these entheogenic medicines, materials, and folkways sourced from the shamanic traditions of indigenous peoples and to suggest a way forward for the entheogenic discourse which is oriented towards social justice. This series of posts will focus on the entheogenic complexes of the Global South as they have become commodified items in the colonial enterprises of alternative health practitioners, New Age spiritual aspirants, and Western drug tourists alike. In conversation with the literature, this project will attempt to critique the psychedelic/entheogenic phenomenon as it has been treated, and mistreated, in the Western crossfire of prohibition, scientific research, medicine, and countercultural evangelism, all of which have been the provenance of white males. This is problematic in that it has resulted in a predominantly white discourse of predominantly indigenous medicine, religion, and knowledge production.
As a collaborative project on entheogenic colonialism, this space represents an effort to investigate the Western "psychedelic" culture itself. Each contribution will explore the premise that the Western psychedelic/entheogenic movements have, since their inception, faltered under an insular discourse of indigenous folk knowledge as directed by, and addressed to, privileged and disproportionately white Westerners. As such, I will argue that the psychedelic movement risks (consciously or not) reproducing many of the problematic tropes of exploitation and racial disparity that characterize other colonialist
enterprises. I will demonstrate the various ways in which this situation of privilege and relative exclusivity has damaged and forestalled various efforts for medical, religious, and personal integration of the psychedelic/entheogenic experience. This project seeks to address and problematize issues of privilege, diversity, cultural appropriation, minority representation, and prejudice which are deeply rooted within mainstream "psychedelic" culture. Up till this point the psychedelic discourse and the culture that surrounds it has been spared from taking a broad account for many of these internal social justice issues including :
—the growing drug/medical tourism industry taking hold in the Global South and its effects on indigenous peoples' rights and cultural sovereignty
—the corralling of drug decriminalization/legalization campaigns around the prohibition of entheogenic drugs (which are the least targeted substances for enforcement) rather than the decriminalization of all drugs in order to address the wider racially colored issues endemic to the War on Drugs. Let's get real, folks: the prison system here in the US is filled with non-violent street drug offenders who are disproportionately people of color not New Age spiritual aspirants or alternative healers.
—an allopathic medical model for psychedelic therapy which would place these medicines (once again) into the purview of pharmaceutical companies and the medical industry, which have demonstrably failed marginalized communities specifically in terms of the availability of mental health care, psychiatric intervention, much less alternative therapies.
—the rehersing of a scientific racism in the Western study of psychedelic/entheogenic cultural knowledges.
The relative sparsity of academic journalism and published research on the topic of psychedelic ethnography and social justice issues might well be credited to the obscurity of psychedelic drugs as a field of inquiry, the stifling effects of their prohibition, and the anti-drug cultural taboo—however I will exhaustively explore the degree to which this movement has hidden its lack of social accountability behind a facade of New Age spiritualism that has long been the face (the Caucasian and male face) of psychedelic drugs in the popular imagination.

Enthoegenic shamanism has been described as a cosmopolitan phenomenon of indigenous medicines and sacred practices that has been identified in various cross-cultural contexts from the shamans of Siberia, Bwiti medicine men in Africa, to the Sadhus of vedic religions, and on to brujos and curanderos of ayahuasca. Broadly speaking the goal of this project is to critically address, describe, and problematize the Western use and appropriation of these entheogenic medicines, materials, and folkways sourced from the shamanic traditions of indigenous peoples and to suggest a way forward for the entheogenic discourse which is oriented towards social justice. This series of posts will focus on the entheogenic complexes of the Global South as they have become commodified items in the colonial enterprises of alternative health practitioners, New Age spiritual aspirants, and Western drug tourists alike. In conversation with the literature, this project will attempt to critique the psychedelic/entheogenic phenomenon as it has been treated, and mistreated, in the Western crossfire of prohibition, scientific research, medicine, and countercultural evangelism, all of which have been the provenance of white males. This is problematic in that it has resulted in a predominantly white discourse of predominantly indigenous medicine, religion, and knowledge production.
As a collaborative project on entheogenic colonialism, this space represents an effort to investigate the Western "psychedelic" culture itself. Each contribution will explore the premise that the Western psychedelic/entheogenic movements have, since their inception, faltered under an insular discourse of indigenous folk knowledge as directed by, and addressed to, privileged and disproportionately white Westerners. As such, I will argue that the psychedelic movement risks (consciously or not) reproducing many of the problematic tropes of exploitation and racial disparity that characterize other colonialist
enterprises. I will demonstrate the various ways in which this situation of privilege and relative exclusivity has damaged and forestalled various efforts for medical, religious, and personal integration of the psychedelic/entheogenic experience. This project seeks to address and problematize issues of privilege, diversity, cultural appropriation, minority representation, and prejudice which are deeply rooted within mainstream "psychedelic" culture. Up till this point the psychedelic discourse and the culture that surrounds it has been spared from taking a broad account for many of these internal social justice issues including :
—the growing drug/medical tourism industry taking hold in the Global South and its effects on indigenous peoples' rights and cultural sovereignty
—the corralling of drug decriminalization/legalization campaigns around the prohibition of entheogenic drugs (which are the least targeted substances for enforcement) rather than the decriminalization of all drugs in order to address the wider racially colored issues endemic to the War on Drugs. Let's get real, folks: the prison system here in the US is filled with non-violent street drug offenders who are disproportionately people of color not New Age spiritual aspirants or alternative healers.
—an allopathic medical model for psychedelic therapy which would place these medicines (once again) into the purview of pharmaceutical companies and the medical industry, which have demonstrably failed marginalized communities specifically in terms of the availability of mental health care, psychiatric intervention, much less alternative therapies.
—the rehersing of a scientific racism in the Western study of psychedelic/entheogenic cultural knowledges.
The relative sparsity of academic journalism and published research on the topic of psychedelic ethnography and social justice issues might well be credited to the obscurity of psychedelic drugs as a field of inquiry, the stifling effects of their prohibition, and the anti-drug cultural taboo—however I will exhaustively explore the degree to which this movement has hidden its lack of social accountability behind a facade of New Age spiritualism that has long been the face (the Caucasian and male face) of psychedelic drugs in the popular imagination.