Fluid Boundaries : Forming and Transforming Identity in Nepal /
Fisher, William
Fluid Boundaries : Forming and Transforming Identity in Nepal / William Fisher. - 1 online resource (256 p.)
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Maps and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction: Thakali Again for the Very First Time -- 2 Drawing Lines: On Constructing and Contesting Boundaries -- 3 Forging Histories -- 4 Separation and Integration: Community and Contestation -- 5 Ritual Landscapes -- 6 Codifying Culture -- 7 Constructing Thakali -- 8 Beyond Sanskritization -- 9 Old Artificers in a New Smithy -- Notes -- Glossary -- Works Cited -- Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
More than an ethnography, this book clarifies one of the most important current debates in anthropology: How should anthropologists regard culture, history, and the power process?Since the 1980s, the Thakali of Nepal have searched for an identity and a clarification of their "true" culture and history in the wake of their rise to political power and achievement of economic success. Although united in this search, the Thakali are divided as to the answers that have been proposed: the "Hinduization" of religious practices, the promotion of Tibetan Buddhism, the revival of practices associated with the Thakali shamans, and secularization. Ironically, the attempts by the Thakali to define their identity reveal that to return to tradition they must first re-create it-but this process of re-creation establishes it in a way in which it has never existed. To return to "tradition"-to become Thakali again-is, in a way, to become Thakali for the very first time.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780231110877 9780231504805
10.7312/fish11086 doi
Thakali (Nepalese people)--Ethnic identity.
Thakali (Nepalese people)--Social life and customs.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General.
305.891/495
Fluid Boundaries : Forming and Transforming Identity in Nepal / William Fisher. - 1 online resource (256 p.)
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Maps and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction: Thakali Again for the Very First Time -- 2 Drawing Lines: On Constructing and Contesting Boundaries -- 3 Forging Histories -- 4 Separation and Integration: Community and Contestation -- 5 Ritual Landscapes -- 6 Codifying Culture -- 7 Constructing Thakali -- 8 Beyond Sanskritization -- 9 Old Artificers in a New Smithy -- Notes -- Glossary -- Works Cited -- Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
More than an ethnography, this book clarifies one of the most important current debates in anthropology: How should anthropologists regard culture, history, and the power process?Since the 1980s, the Thakali of Nepal have searched for an identity and a clarification of their "true" culture and history in the wake of their rise to political power and achievement of economic success. Although united in this search, the Thakali are divided as to the answers that have been proposed: the "Hinduization" of religious practices, the promotion of Tibetan Buddhism, the revival of practices associated with the Thakali shamans, and secularization. Ironically, the attempts by the Thakali to define their identity reveal that to return to tradition they must first re-create it-but this process of re-creation establishes it in a way in which it has never existed. To return to "tradition"-to become Thakali again-is, in a way, to become Thakali for the very first time.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780231110877 9780231504805
10.7312/fish11086 doi
Thakali (Nepalese people)--Ethnic identity.
Thakali (Nepalese people)--Social life and customs.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General.
305.891/495

