THE PEYOTE CULT
The Peyote Cult by Weston La Barre (1915-1996) is the classic
work on peyotism, originating in Weston La Barre's studies of the
use of peyote in the rituals of fifteen Native American tribes in
the 1930s. It has been revised many times. This is the latest
edition (the fifth, enlarged edition), now back in print.
For decades, readers on peyotism have enjoyed Weston La Barre's
fascinating original study, which began when the author at age
twenty-four, studied the rites of Native American tribes using
Lophophora williamsii, the small, spineless, carrot-shaped peyote
cactus growing in the Rio Grande Valley and Southward.
The Peyote Cult includes discussions of contemporary drug
culture and experiments with altered states of consciousness and
psychedelic drugs, including Timothy Leary, Richard Alpert and
Carlos Casteneda. La Barre looks at the legal aspects of drug use,
ritual drug use (including in the Native American Church), and the
increasing spread of peyotism from the South-West to other Native
American tribes. La Barre also explores related issues, such as
anthropology, economics, chemistry, botany, pharmacology, and
archeology.
The Peyote Cult is still quite generally considered to be the
one outstanding work on peyote... La Barre follows the search for
the 'mystic experience' through use of chemical substances - a new
fashion albeit as old as history - in an unusually objective
manner.
Richard Evans Schultes, Psychedelic Review
The Peyote Cult includes extensive bibliographic and reference
material, including lengthy and in-depth bibliographical essays and
notes on audio and media material as well as journals and books.
Illustrated with photographs and diagrams., and an index.
WESTON LA BARRE
Weston La Barre is best known for his work in anthropology and
ethnography, in which he drew on the theories of psychoanalysis and
psychiatry. Born in Uniontown, PA, La Barre studied at Princeton
and Yale, and later taught at Rutgers, Wisconsin and Duke
universities. La Barre conducted field work across North and South
America, and later through India, China, Africa and Europe. He
studied the Plains Indians and their peyote cult with Richard Evans
Schultes (which resulted in the 1938 book The Peyote Cult). La
Barre's masterwork is The Ghost Dance: The Origin of Religion
(1970), which draws together his explorations of shamanism, world
religion, Native American culture, altered states of consciousness
and the use of drugs in belief systems. His other books include The
Human Animal (1954), They Shall Take Up Serpents (1962), Culture In
Context (1990), and Muelos (1985).
BOOKS BY WESTON LA BARRE
The Peyote Cult The Aymara Indians of the Lake Titicaca Plateau
The Human Animal Materia Medica of the Aymara They Shall Take up
Serpents: Psychology of the Southern Snakehandling Cult Shadow of
Childhood: Neoteny and the Biology of Religion The Ghost Dance: The
Origins of Religion Culture in Context, Selected Writings of Weston
La Barre Muelos: A Stone Age Superstition About Sexuality
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