In traditional Siberian Turkish shamanism, the call for shaman duty is carried out at the request of the spirits during the selection process of the candidate. It is also common for spirits to have a husband-wife relationship with the candidate in the variety of invocations to shamanic mission. In the process of becoming a shaman, the sexual intercourse of spirits with the island has spread widely both in Turkish shaman legends and ethnographic materials and in non-Turkish tribes. The shaman performs a ritual transformation by wearing the clothes of the opposite sex and adopting the attitudes of the opposite sex to enter the world of the spirits. This is called shamanic transvestism in the ethnographic literature, which actually includes the phenomena of transsexuality and androgyny. Androgynous shaman gods and shamanic spirits are responsible for the transformation of the candidate. Just as the male shaman transforms himself into a woman in order to be included in the spirit world and to please the spirits who were conceived as females, so the female shaman becomes male. The shaman's marriage with spirits (shaman's soul mate) is also connected to the phenomenon of transvestism. In shamanism, transvestism or transvestism has been used broadly to designate third sex representatives who break gender taboos. Because shamanic transvestism is internal, not external, and has a more metaphorical meaning. In this article, travestism in Siberian and Central Asian Turkish shamanism - similarity to women; transsexuality - a shaman with extraordinary power, undergoing physical and spiritual changes, turning into the opposite sex; androgyny – the signs of a third genus are considered together from a holistic point of view, and the issue is viewed in the context of the shaman representing the third genus.
Primary Language | Turkish |
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Subjects | Cultural Studies |
Journal Section | Research Articles |
Authors | |
Early Pub Date | December 26, 2021 |
Publication Date | January 8, 2022 |
Acceptance Date | October 1, 2021 |
Published in Issue | Year 2022 Volume: 10 Issue: 26 |