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The Tibetan district of Tsari with its sacred snow-covered peak of
Pure Crystal Mountain has long been a place of symbolic and ritual
significance for Tibetan peoples. In this book, Toni Huber provides
the first thorough study of a major Tibetan Buddhist pilgrimage
center and cult mountain, and explores the esoteric and popular
traditions of ritual there. The main focus is on the period of the
1940s and '50s, just prior to the 1959 Lhasa uprising and
subsequent Tibetan diaspora into South Asia. Huber's work thus
documents Tibetan life patterns and cultural traditions which have
largely disappeared with the advent of Chinese colonial modernity
in Tibet. In addition to the work's documentary content, Huber
offers discussion and analysis of the construction and meaning of
Tibetan cultural categories of space, place, and person, and the
practice of ritual and organization of traditional society in
relation to them.
Once the world's prairies, grasslands, steppes and tundra teemed
with massive herds of game: gazelle, wild ass, bison, caribou and
antelope. Humans seeking to hunt these large fast-moving herds
devised a range of specialised traps that share many
characteristics across all continents. Typically consisting of
guiding walls or lines of stones leading to an enclosure or trap,
game drives were designed for a mass killing. Construction of the
game drive, organisation of the hunt and processing of the carcass
often required group co-operation and in many cases game drives
have been linked to seasonal gatherings of otherwise scattered
groups, who may have used these occasions not only to hunt, but
also for social, ritual and economic activities. THE GAZELLE'S
DREAM: GAME DRIVES OF THE OLD AND NEW WORLDS is the first
comparative study of game drives, examining this mode of hunting
across three continents and a broad range of periods. The book
describes the hunting of bison in North America, reindeer in
Scandinavia, antelope in Tibet and an extensive array of examples
from the greater Middle East, from Egypt to Armenia. THE GAZELLE'S
DREAM will be of value to anyone with an interest in the history of
hunting and wildlife management.
The Eastern Himalaya holds perhaps the highest levels of
ethnolinguistic diversity in all Eurasia, with over 300 languages
spoken by as many distinct cultural groups. What factors can
explain such diversity? How did it evolve, and what can its
analysis teach us about the prehistory of its wider region? This
pioneering interdisciplinary volume brings together a diverse group
of linguists and anthropologists, all of whom seek to reconstruct
aspects of Eastern Himalayan ethnolinguistic prehistory from an
empirical standpoint, on the basis of primary fieldwork-derived
data from a diverse range of Himalayan Indigenous languages and
cultural practices. Contributors are: David Bradley, Scott
DeLancey, Toni Huber, Gwendolyn Hyslop, Linda Konnerth, Ismael
Lieberherr, Yankee Modi, Stephen Morey, Mark W. Post, Uta Reino hl,
Alban Stockhausen, Amos Teo, and Marion Wettstein .
This book presents the first comprehensive anthropological account
of premodern Tibetan pastoral economy and social organization in
the Kham region of eastern Tibet. It offers a uniquely fine-grained
descriptive portrait of traditional Tibetan rural life among nomads
in the kingdom of Dege. Based upon extensive ethnographic
interviews, this study yields a nuanced analysis of the most
crucial and controversial relationship in premodern Tibetan
societies, namely, that ensuing between local lords and their
dependents. It convincingly readdresses anthropological debates and
political claims about feudalism or serfdom in Tibetan societies
from a perspective that is more sensitive to local historical,
social, and economic contexts.
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