Hi Paolo,

Would you be so kind as to tell us to which journal you are proposing this?

thanks in advance,
Matthew

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________________________________
From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> on behalf of Paolo Eugenio 
Rosati via INDOLOGY <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, February 6, 2022 9:29:49 PM
To: Indology <[email protected]>
Subject: [INDOLOGY] Special Issue on Magic, Supernatural and Danger in South 
and Southeast Asia

Dear Indologists,

I am looking for one or two article's proposal that will discuss folk and/or 
vernacular and/or tribal and/or tantric traditions in Southeast Asia for a 
special issue I am going to edit, (provisionally) entitled: "Magic, 
Supernatural and Danger: Religions at the 'Periphery' of South and Southeast 
Asia".

It would be great if you could circulate this informal call to anyone that 
could be interested. The special issue is planned to be published in a 
double-blind peer-reviewed journal. The first manuscript draft should be 
submitted by September/October 2022.

Sincerely,
Paolo

Special issue's summary (draft):

South and Southeast Asian folk and indigenous religions share several 
socio-cultural and religious traits with Tantra. Indeed, through processes of 
‘parochialization’ and ‘universalization’ (Marriott 1955), Tantra succeeded in 
adapting pan-Indian cults to the religious needs of local, low-caste, and often 
illiterate societies and vice versa. Tantra, then, is a cultural bridge that 
can link mainstream pan-Indian traditions with local, vernacular, low-caste, 
folk and indigenous traditions. These societies, which often rely on the oral 
transmission of their belief narratives, have too often been mislabelled by 
colonial rhetoric as ‘little’ in contraposition to the ‘great’ Indic traditions 
(Redfield 1955; Singer 1972). Instead, local religious phenomena underscore a 
complex polymorphism whose origins are to be found in the intersection of 
primitive religious systems—such as the ‘proto-Śākta tradition’ (Samuel 2008) 
and its worship of mother goddess—and pan-Indian religions.



Several folk, low-caste and indigenous religions such as Tantra are very often 
involved in the worship of fierce female deities (alone or in conjunction with 
a male partner) through the ritual use and consumption of substances, which the 
Brahmanical and non-Brahmanical socio-cultural mainstream designated as 
defiled, contaminated, and therefore prohibited—such as blood, semen, vaginal 
discharge, menstrual fluid, bone marrow, urine, faeces, ashes, bones (and 
skulls), raw meat, liquors, intoxicating herbs, etc. However, these substances, 
according to the high-caste Sanskrit literature and oral narratives, are an 
invaluable source of power that was associated with and, in a sense, generated 
by the liminality, transgression, and impurity of the ‘margins’ of society 
(Urban 2009).



In the ‘peripheries’ throughout monsoon Asia, magical, shamanic and 
supernatural milieus have been attested since early history, although all 
pre-colonial evidence was provided by a self-proclaimed socio-religious 
‘centre’. The colonial ideology of a ‘centre’ against the ‘margins’ is a 
misleading understanding of Indic religious phenomena. Indeed, medieval kings 
were often involved in performing extreme and dangerous rituals that had the 
secular purpose of strengthening their social position against internal and 
external enemies (Rosati 2017). Nonetheless, magic-shamanic religious practices 
and supernatural experiences were deliberately placed outside of mainstream 
Indic religions during the colonial period due to their intrinsic danger. On 
the other hand, several magic-shamanic practices were reformulated as elements 
not belonging to the magic-shamanic milieu but to the religious mainstream. 
From both Buddhism and Hindu traditions there are several examples of  
misleading interpretation. Among these practices, we could enumerate the dream 
experiences and visions of the Bodhisattva, which are avoided to be interpreted 
as shamanic dreams, or the siddhis which are defined by the textual scholars in 
every sense, but not in connection with the word magic (e.g. Sanderson 1988), 
although they are powers that overcome the laws of nature (Rosati 
[forthcoming]).



This special issue analyses ecstatic possession, shapeshifting or 
therianthropy, healing abilities, apotropaic and harmful magic, alchemy, flying 
ability, and many other phenomena related to the magical and shamanic tradition 
are analyzed. The aim of this special issue is to examine the overlap, 
intersection and superimposition between vernacular, folk, tribal, tantric, and 
pan-Indian religions in order to outline the role of magical-shamanic and 
supernatural phenomena in the monsoon Asian periphery and in mainstream 
socio-religious milieus.

--
Paolo E. Rosati
PhD in Asian and African Studies
https://uniroma1.academia.edu/paolo<https://uniroma1.academia.edu/PaoloRosati/>erosati/<https://uniroma1.academia.edu/PaoloRosati/>
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Mobile/Whatsapp: (+39) 338 73 83 472
Skype: paoloe.rosati
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