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Kilton Stewart and The Marvelous Senoi Dream Controversy.
A summary by Richard Wilkerson


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The Senoi represent a whole development of dreamwork and dream anthropology that really forms its own world
off the left of mainstream anthropology. I'm re-presenting a summary from my online History of Dream Sharing
class as the controversy will someday soon move onto the Net. The work has had a great influence on American
dreamwork culture since the 1960's.

The Senoi are (were) a Malaysian hunting and gathering tribe brought to the attention of the West by Kilton
Stewart. His descriptions of this happy tribe, free of disease and mental illness due to their morning dream sharing
and techniques of dream control, were first described in the early 1950's though the research itself took place
before the Second World War.

But (outside of the dream content psychologist Calvin Hall), the information was relatively unknown. Then Charles
Tart (or a friend of his - Charles can't remember) rediscovered Kilton's writings and made them available at
Esalen, the experimental retreat center in Big Sur, California. The ideas became part of a larger program to find
the best in self development and consciousness raising techniques and distribute them into the mainstream
education system. The program floundered, but Tart and George Leonard, a journalist/educational theorist, both
wrote popular books that included information on the Senoi.

(According to Domhoff) With the growing frustration with urbanization, technology and Western values arising out
of the Vietnam War conflict, the appeal of more earthy, simpler paths arose and with it the valorization of native
and primitive cultural patterns and living styles. In the early 70's both Ann Faraday and Patricia Garfield use the
Senoi as models in their popular books and Garfield even had a chance to talk with some Senoi that were working
in a hospital she visited in the area. The dreamwork principles are summarized by Domhoff: (via Stewart and
Garfield) (1985, pg 9):

1. Always confront and conquer danger in dreams. If an animal looms out of the jungle, go toward it. If someone
attacks you, fight back.

2. Always move toward pleasurable experiences in dreams, If you are attracted to someone in a dream, feel free to
turn the attraction into a full sexual experience, If you are enjoying the pleasurable sensations of flying or swing,
relax and experience them fully.

3. Always make your dreams have a positive outcome and extract a creative product form them. Best of all in this
regard, try to obtain a gift from the dream images, such as a poem, a song, a dance, a design, or a painting.

As dian mentioned, if one can't handle the beasties along, you can call on others to help and this is very effective
too.

But other researchers could not find any evidence of that the tribe practiced this morning ritual and by the early
1980's other critics left the reality of the Senoi in question. The most critical of these researchers was G. William
Domhoff, and in his 1985 _The Mystique of Dreams_ he "debunks" the whole affair and argues not only that the
Senoi people show no signs of having practiced these techniques and that the whole program as adopted by
Westerners only promotes the very control and manipulation of the environment it ardently is meant to offer an
alternative for in the first place.

But the critiques have not caused much despair. Most have felt that the Senoi are an important inner metaphor of
our desires and valid as such. For an example of this creativity, see Strephon Kaplan Williams' Jungian-Senoi
Dreamwork Manual, the culmination of a myriad of wonderful approaches to the dream inspired by Jung , the Senoi
and his work in areas of healing and wholeness.

Recently some, like Jeremy Taylor, feel the criticisms of the Senoi to be exaggerated and feel that the evidence
against them came from the tribe after it had been destroyed by contact with the modern world.

The controversy continues, as is evidenced by the very heated discussions found in current issues of the ASD (
association for the study of dreams) newsletters between Taylor and Domhoff. The discussion continued in a 1996
panel discussion at the ASD convention in Berkeley which included Allen Flagg. Flagg, who married Stewart's wife
after his death. Flagg has plans to bring the work more into the public domain, following the lead of Kilton and
Clara Stewart who also taught classes on the Senoi dream control techniques and talked about plans of creating an
institute. I noticed a piece by Flagg in the latest Summer 97 Dream Network Journal.

I'm sure we will see and hear more about the Senoi, and can watch for their appearance on the Net.

Richard Wilkerson

Name: ?¿Ðrèå/\/\èrGina?¿ ™!

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