A totem (Ojibwe doodem) is a spirit being, sacred object, or symbol that serves as an emblem of a group of people, such as a family, clan, lineage, or tribe.
While the term totem is derived from the North American Ojibwe language, belief in tutelary spirits and deities is not limited to indigenous peoples of the Americas but common to a number of cultures worldwide. However, the traditional people of those cultures have words for their guardian spirits in their own languages, and do not call these spirits or symbols "totems".
Contemporary neoshamanic, New Age, and mythopoetic men's movements not otherwise involved in the practice of a tribal religion have been known to use "totem" terminology for the personal identification with a tutelary spirit or spirit guide. However, this is generally seen as cultural misappropriation.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
The spiritual, mutual relationships between Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders and the natural world are often described as totems. Many Indigenous groups object to using the imported Ojibwe term "totem" to describe a pre-existing and independent practice, although others use the term. The term "token" has replaced "totem" in some areas.
In some cases, such as the Yuin
of coastal New South Wales, a person may have multiple totems of
different types (personal, family or clan, gender, tribal and
ceremonial). The lakinyeri or clans of the Ngarrindjeri were each associated with one or two plant or animal totems, called ngaitji. Totems are sometimes attached to moiety relations (such as in the case of Wangarr relationships for the Yolngu).
Torres Strait Islanders have auguds, typically translated as totems. An augud could be a kai augud ("chief totem") or mugina augud ("little totem").
Early anthropologists sometimes attributed Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander totemism to ignorance about procreation, with the
entrance of an ancestral spirit individual (the "totem") into the woman
believed to be the cause of pregnancy (rather than insemination). James George Frazer in Totemism and Exogamy
wrote that Aboriginal people "have no idea of procreation as being
directly associated with sexual intercourse, and firmly believe that
children can be born without this taking place". Frazer's thesis has been criticised by other anthropologists, including Alfred Radcliffe-Brown in Nature in 1938.
Anthropological perspectives
Totemism is a belief associated with animistic
religions. The totem is usually an animal or other natural figure that
spiritually represents a group of related people such as a clan.
Early anthropologists and ethnologists like James George Frazer, Alfred Cort Haddon, John Ferguson McLennan and W. H. R. Rivers
identified totemism as a shared practice across indigenous groups in
unconnected parts of the world, typically reflecting a stage of human
development.
Scottish ethnologist John Ferguson McLennan, following the vogue of 19th-century research, addressed totemism in a broad perspective in his study The Worship of Animals and Plants (1869, 1870).
McLennan did not seek to explain the specific origin of the totemistic
phenomenon but sought to indicate that all of the human race had, in ancient times, gone through a totemistic stage.
Another Scottish scholar, Andrew Lang, early in the 20th century, advocated a nominalistic
explanation of totemism, namely, that local groups or clans, in
selecting a totemistic name from the realm of nature, were reacting to a
need to be differentiated.
If the origin of the name was forgotten, Lang argued, there followed a
mystical relationship between the object — from which the name was once
derived — and the groups that bore these names. Through nature myths,
animals and natural objects were considered as the relatives, patrons,
or ancestors of the respective social units.
British anthropologist Sir James George Frazer published Totemism and Exogamy in 1910, a four-volume work based largely on his research among Indigenous Australians and Melanesians, along with a compilation of the work of other writers in the field.
By 1910, the idea of totemism as having common properties across
cultures was being challenged, with Russian American ethnologist Alexander Goldenweiser subjecting totemistic phenomena to sharp criticism. Goldenweiser compared Indigenous Australians and First Nations in British Columbia
to show that the supposedly shared qualities of totemism - exogamy,
naming, descent from the totem, taboo, ceremony, reincarnation, guardian
spirits and secret societies and art - were actually expressed very
differently between Australia and British Columbia, and between
different peoples in Australia and between different peoples in British
Columbia. He then expands his analysis to other groups to show that they
share some of the customs associated with totemism, without having
totems. He concludes by offering two general definitions of totemism,
one of which is: "Totemism is the tendency of definite social units to
become associated with objects and symbols of emotional value".
The founder of a French school of sociology, Émile Durkheim, examined totemism from a sociological and theological point of view, attempting to discover a pure religion in very ancient forms and claimed to see the origin of religion in totemism.
The leading representative of British social anthropology, A. R. Radcliffe-Brown, took a totally different view of totemism. Like Franz Boas,
he was skeptical that totemism could be described in any unified way.
In this he opposed the other pioneer of social anthropology in England, Bronisław Malinowski,
who wanted to confirm the unity of totemism in some way and approached
the matter more from a biological and psychological point of view than
from an ethnological one. According to Malinowski, totemism was not a
cultural phenomenon, but rather the result of trying to satisfy basic
human needs within the natural world. As far as Radcliffe-Brown was
concerned, totemism was composed of elements that were taken from
different areas and institutions, and what they have in common is a
general tendency to characterize segments of the community through a
connection with a portion of nature. In opposition to Durkheim's theory
of sacralization, Radcliffe-Brown took the point of view that nature is
introduced into the social order rather than secondary to it. At first,
he shared with Malinowski the opinion that an animal becomes totemistic
when it is “good to eat.” He later came to oppose the usefulness of this
viewpoint, since many totems—such as crocodiles and flies—are dangerous
and unpleasant.
In 1938, the structural functionalist anthropologist A. P. Elkin wrote The Australian Aborigines: How to understand them. His typologies of totemism included eight "forms" and six "functions".
The forms identified were:
- individual (a personal totem),
- sex (one totem for each gender),
- moiety (the "tribe" consists of two groups, each with a totem),
- section (the "tribe" consists of four groups, each with a totem),
- subsection (the "tribe" consists of eight groups, each with a totem),
- clan (a group with common descent share a totem or totems),
- local (people living or born in a particular area share a totem) and
- "multiple" (people across groups share a totem
The functions identified were:
- social (totems regulate marriage, and often a person cannot eat the flesh of their totem),
- cult (totems associated with a secret organisation),
- conception (multiple meanings),
- dream (the person appears as this totem in others' dreams),
- classificatory (the totem sorts people) and
- assistant (the totem assists a healer or clever person).
The terms in Elkin's typologies see some use today, but Aboriginal customs are seen as more diverse than his typologies suggest.
As a chief representative of modern structuralism, French ethnologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, and his, Le Totémisme aujourd'hui ("Totemism Today" [1958]) are often cited in the field.
In the 21st century, Australian anthropologists question the
extent to which "totemism" can be generalised even across different Aboriginal Australian peoples, let alone to other cultures like the Ojibwe from whom the term was originally derived. Rose, James and Watson write that:
The term ‘totem’ has proved to be a blunt instrument. Far more subtlety is required, and again, there is regional variation on this issue.
Literature
Poets,
and to a lesser extent fiction writers, often use anthropological
concepts, including the anthropological understanding of totemism. For
this reason literary criticism often resorts to psychoanalytic,
anthropological analyses.
Totem poles
Totem poles of the Pacific Northwest of North America are monumental poles of heraldry.
They feature many different designs (bears, birds, frogs, people, and
various supernatural beings and aquatic creatures) that function as
crests of families or chiefs. They recount stories owned by those
families or chiefs, or commemorate special occasions. These stories are known to be read from the bottom of the pole to the top.