Between Ordinary Pain and Extraordinary Knowledge: The Seer Vanga in the Everyday Life of Bulgarians during Socialism (1960s-1970s)
Author: Valtchinova, Galia
Source: Aspasia, Volume 3 , pp. 106-130(25)
Abstract:
This article focuses on a little-known aspect of everyday life in socialist Bulgaria: the act of consulting a clairvoyant for health issues, thereby dealing with the broader process of medicalisation of healing. It is grounded on files from consultations with the renowned Bulgarian seer, prophetess and healer baba Vanga, which were collected between 1966 and 1974. These highly specific historical sources allow me to analyse late twentieth-century ideas and notions of health and disease, of pain and suffering, and thus to access social realities, cultural practices and representations of healing under socialism. By scrutinising the categories used in these records, the article delineates the relationship between the seer-healer, her patients, and the state institutions involved in the regulation of this process.Keywords: BALKANS; BULGARIA; FOLK HEALER; MACEDONIA; MEDICALISATION OF HEALING; MODERNITY; RELIGION; SEER; STATE SOCIALISM
DOI: 10.3167/asp.2009.030106
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