Singing Story, Healing Drum explores the shamanic practices,
worldview, oral traditions, and music of the Turkic peoples of Tuva and
Khakassia (south Siberia), past and present. It is based on the author's
fieldwork since 1993, conducting interviews, recording stories,
participating in rituals and everyday life. Set in the context of social
change in the post-Soviet period, it includes conversations, folktales,
legends, and shamanic poems that illuminate spiritual traditions, and
introduces ethnographic literature in Russian, mostly unavailable in the
West. Wherever possible, the material comes through the voices of
indigenous people: scholars, practitioners, and participants in cultural
review.
Kira Van Deusen presents an integrated, holistic picture of Turkic
spiritual culture, exploring the inner world shamans and other
visionaries describe and the ways they cross the boundaries between
ordinary and non-ordinary reality. Since nomadic life is never static,
its traditional expression comes through performing arts--music and oral
poetry--more than visual representation. Most of these arts involve
sound and the processes are equally as important as the results. They
involve the whole community and are vital in the revival of indigenous
culture today.