Book Review: Indigenous Worldview and the Dehypnosis of the West

Authors

  • Robert Sean Lewis (Rafiq)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40385

Keywords:

Indigenous studies, philosophy of fear, metacognition, Four Arrows

Abstract

R. Michael Fisher’s Fearless Engagement of Four Arrows: The True Story of an Indigenous-Based Social Transformer recounts the life stories and praxis of Indigenous elder and scholar Four Arrows in order to elucidate how fear management can help us to achieve personal and planetary balance. To this end, the process of subliminal “normalized” fear induction is likened to mass hypnosis, and fear management is understood as a process of dehypnosis whereby we are able to use our entrancement by fear to access intuitive and primal knowledge, thus turning fear into a bridge to personal and planetary transformation. Four Arrows’ systematic approach to fear management is framed in terms of a fear vaccine that he calls CAT-FAWN, which refers to making constructive use of fear-induced “concentration activated transformation” (CAT) by consciously orienting ourselves to the holistic interdependence of “fear, authority, words and nature” (FAWN).

Author Biography

Robert Sean Lewis (Rafiq)

Rafiq is writer and filmmaker Robert Sean Lewis. His is the author of Gaj: The End of Religion (2004) and the memoir Days of Shock, Days of Wonder (2016). His documentaries Be Smile: The Stories of Two Urban Inuit (2006) and Khanqah: A Sufi Place (2011) are online at Vimeo.

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Published

02-03-2020

How to Cite

Lewis (Rafiq), R. S. (2020). Book Review: Indigenous Worldview and the Dehypnosis of the West. Journal of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies, 17(2), 125–130. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40385

Issue

Section

Book Reviews / Recensions