"FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES ANTROPOLOGIA""THE RADICAL OTHERNESS THAT HEALS proposes an interesting theoretical advance in va-rious schools of local and regional, and national and transnational analysis. It is based on a multilocal ethnography and a detailed sociological and political reading of the interactions between institutions and social and cultural representations of otherness. The original theoretical proposal consists of reading the reconfiguration of shamanisms stemming from processes of ethnicization and patrimonialization, and skillfully recons-tructing the national ideological space and the most recent effects of multiculturalism through representations of otherness.""Anne-Marie Losonczy, Director of Studies at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris""The concept of the yagecero field serves as the axis of this innovative research that in-tertwines a multi-sited ethnography with a biographical approach to the actors. An ex-tensive review of the literature on indigenous shamanisms, their networks, national po-litics, inter-ethnic relations and representations of the radical alterity that heals makes it possible for the reader to draw near, based on the close proximity of neo-shamanic practices, to perceive the national and transnational influences that are an integral part of the ongoing dynamics of this phenomenon. The analysis of neo-shamanism and the practices of the taita yageceros in Colombia contributes to deepening current debates on contemporary shamanisms and the broader issue of new religiosities, the transfor-mations of indigenous shamanisms, the impact of contemporary non-indigenous sha-manisms on indigenous groups and their politics of identity. This book provides a va-luable input to the characterization of New Age spirituality from its understanding as a localized practice. It opens a space to compare the aforementioned manifestations in Colombia with similar ones in different countries.""Esther Jean Langdon, Professor at the Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil"