Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Sacred Paw: The Bear in Nature, Myth, and Literature

Rate this book
RustyRiver offers fast daily shipping and 100% customer satisfaction GUARANTEED! Missing dust jacket.

243 pages, Hardcover

First published June 1, 1992

5 people are currently reading
131 people want to read

About the author

Paul Shepard

38 books48 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
22 (55%)
4 stars
9 (22%)
3 stars
8 (20%)
2 stars
1 (2%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
18 reviews2 followers
May 6, 2010
Fascinating book. Happened across it quite by accident at a used book store. Started reading it the same day, and was delighted!

Long story short: I love bears. The animals themselves I love, but also find the cultural associations, folklore, and mythology attached to bears to be just fascinating.

This book explores possible reasons why humans are so drawn to bears. Chapter 2 talks about the different species of bears and their characteristics. Most of the rest of the book goes into the folklore, mythology, and religious rites associated with bears, but there are also sections on bears in literature, "The Past and Future of Bears," and the fear of bears. I had learned a fair amount before finding this book, but The Sacred Paw is a veritable treasure trove of bear-related information, and I've been able to learn quite a bit more.

The index and lengthy bibliography are very much appreciated.
Profile Image for Mandy Haggith.
Author 26 books30 followers
April 6, 2014
I don't know of a better summary of bear lore - summarising from around the world the significance of bears to indigenous people. It draws together examples of how bears have appeared in myths, legends, stories, rituals, taboos and in literature and makes an intelligent analysis from this of the importance of bears to human society wherever we have shared their habitat. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Claire.
411 reviews43 followers
March 5, 2016
The Sacred Paw can draw some pretty far-fetched conclusions about just how deeply bears as a cultural symbol have seeped into the collective unconscious, yet it is researched and written so convincingly that by the end of this book, you'll be seeing bears everywhere.
Profile Image for Emma Hastings.
11 reviews1 follower
February 12, 2023
The Sacred Paw: The Bear in Nature, Myth, and Literature (1985) by Paul Shepard and Barry Sanders includes a lot of interesting details about bear ecology, folklore, and religion, but you have to slog through a nonsensical overarching argument in order to gather them. The central chapter of The Sacred Paw concerns ceremonies of the “slain bear,” a set of similar rituals enacted by hunting peoples across the northern circumpolar region. The authors offer a convincing argument that these rituals, perhaps stemming from a common tradition, involve honoring the bear as an intermediary between people and animals. The bear is like humans in its omnivorous exploitation of a wide range of food sources, its dexterous use of its front legs and paws, its tendency to stand on hind legs, and its physicality—a skinned bear is anatomically similar to a human. In slain bear ceremonies, people thank the bear for giving its life to humans, and believe that if they treat the bear respectfully in death its spirit will intercede on their behalf and tell other animals to give themselves up for human consumption. The bear becomes a vehicle for humans to not only to ensure future hunting success but to assuage their guilt about killing animals by telling themselves that, if treated well, the animals actually die voluntarily.

Unfortunately, the discussion of bear mythology did not stay grounded in specific examples such as the rituals of the slain bear. The authors seem to believe that, in Europe, northern Asia, and North America, all religion ultimately descends from worship of the bear, and all mythology stems from the myth of the Bear Mother, a human woman who marries and has children with a bear. I don’t think this is much of an exaggeration of their argument—they write that the Bear Mother myth “may be the most persistent and widely told tale ever devised” (57) and that “the Bear Mother may also be the first great mythopoetic mother of all life” (60). To them, all goddesses are degenerated Bear Mothers, and all heroes from Odysseus to Beowulf are corrupted versions of her Bear Sons. They even claim that “as the mythology of the bear entered Neolithic Europe, its multiple qualities were divided and the single image broken,” arguing that the many gods, goddesses, and religious concepts we are familiar with today are just shards of the one original bear religion (112). They provide no real evidence to support these claims, which is unsurprising, because what evidence could prove that the Bear Mother was the first or most widespread myth in ancient world, or that bears were the original European religion?

The authors seem to have taken two universalizing systems of mythology that they mention in the text—James Frazer’s theory of dying-and-rising vegetation gods and Marija Gimbutas’s theory of the Great Goddess who dominated religion in “Old Europe” before the influx of patriarchal Indo-Europeans—and decided that both of these theories, despite being outdated and/or heavily criticized, are accurate in that they actually describe the original dominance of bears in European, north Asian, and North American religion. All dying-and-rising gods are corruptions of the original sacred bear, because bears go underground to hibernate and remerge in spring, and the Great Goddess is a corruption of the original Bear Mother, because…actually, I don’t think there was any explanation provided for this leap.

And then there is their linguistic argument—they argue that nearly all important concepts in Indo-European languages are linguistically related to the words for “bear,” and this somehow reveals a fundamental symbolic connection in the human mind between bears and nearly everything. They claim that “etymologically, there can be no way of knowing” the nature of these connections, but I have to disagree. Someone with actual etymological knowledge could no doubt show that many of these connections are coincidental or reflective of natural linguistic processes, rather than being indicative of a profound and unique relationship between bears and human language. I admit that I was skimming by the time I reached the chapter on bears in literature; while some of the discussion of bears in ancient and medieval literature was interesting, the authors also quote at length from 20th century poetry, which caused my little remaining patience to evaporate.

In summary, I am frustrated with The Sacred Paw for attempting to argue that bears are the ur-religion of humanity rather than simply exploring the genuinely interesting aspects of bears in mythology and folklore. The authors don’t even mention until the final chapter my favorite factoid about bears in religion, the presence of carefully arranged bear bones in human and even Neanderthal archaeological sites that are tens of thousands of years old. Bears are plenty fascinating without the authors’ painfully strained argument about their supremacy in human religion.
Profile Image for Brian Griffith.
Author 7 books334 followers
December 22, 2020
A fine collection of lore on bears in world and human history--from Paleolithic temples of the cave bear, to bears of power and glory in Native American traditions, to the rapidly evolving place of bears in the recent cultural and environmental landscape.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.