Before reading this paper, I had never heard the word “technoshamanism” in my life. But after reading it, the concept actually made a lot of sense to me. Shanken explains that a shaman is a person in ancient cultures who had a special role in their community. Using tools like drums, chanting, and plant medicines, they would enter a deep spiritual state and use that experience to heal people. What surprised me is that Shanken argues modern artists are doing the exact same thing, just with technology instead.

The example that hit me the most was Roy Ascott. He traveled to the Amazon and participated in ceremonies using a plant medicine that makes you feel deeply connected to everything around you, like the boundaries between yourself and other people just disappear. He then looked at the internet and realized it creates the exact same feeling. As he wrote, “this ancient ritual mirrors our contemporary artistic aspirations using digital technologies.” That comparison felt so real to me because we experience that sense of connection online every single day.

In live coding, when you perform in a shared session with other people in real time, something interesting happens. You stop focusing on yourself as an individual and instead you become fully absorbed in the collective sound you are all building together. That feeling of losing yourself inside something bigger is exactly what Shanken is describing throughout the whole paper.