This study of dreaming, death and shared consciousness develops a context that is humanistic, comparative and evidence-based in its engagement with the work of cultural anthropology, ethnomusicology and the study of the imagination. It also reaches into current research on consciousness at the interface of neuroscience, anthropology, sociology, musicology, computer studies, psychology/parapsychology, literature and cognitive studies, in the process of drawing its content from a range of original writing from diverse disciplinary and cultural backgrounds.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface
‘There’, Ruth Finnegan,
Walking with dragons, Tim Ingold
The double language of dreaming, Barbara Tedlock
Home as dream space, Kate Pahl
In the land of dreams: wives, husbands and dreaming, Irma-Ritta Järvinen and Senni Timonen
Pre-dreaming: telepathy, prophecy and trance, Gerd Baumann with Walo Subsin and doctoral students
Trance and sacred language in religious Daoism, Phyllis Ghim-Lian Chew
Everyday trancing and musical daydreams, Ruth Herbert
An angel of modernity: Karlheinz Stockhausen’s musical vision, Morag Josephine Grant,
How do singers and other groups synchronise to form communities? Guy Hayward
The un-speak-able language of united sensing: taste the wine! Gianmarco Navarini
Then… Ruth Finnegan
Coda
Further reading
Bibliography