High Religion
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Sherry B. Ortner
and Sherry B. Ortner
About this book
An eminent anthropologist examines the foundings of the first celibate Buddhist monasteries among the Sherpas of Nepal in the early twentieth century--a religious development that was a major departure from "folk" or "popular" Buddhism. Sherry Ortner is the first to integrate social scientific and historical modes of analysis in a study of the Sherpa monasteries and one of the very few to attempt such an account for Buddhist monasteries anywhere. Combining ethnographic and oral-historical methods, she scrutinizes the interplay of political and cultural factors in the events culminating in the foundings. Her work constitutes a major advance both in our knowledge of Sherpa Buddhism and in the integration of anthropological and historical modes of analysis.
At the theoretical level, the book contributes to an emerging theory of "practice," an explanation of the relationship between human intentions and actions on the one hand, and the structures of society and culture that emerge from and feed back upon those intentions and actions on the other. It will appeal not only to the increasing number of anthropologists working on similar problems but also to historians anxious to discover what anthropology has to offer to historical analysis. In addition, it will be essential reading for those interested in Nepal, Tibet, the Sherpa, or Buddhism in general.
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Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Illustrations
xi -
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Acknowledgments
xiii -
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Note on Orthography
xvii -
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Dramatis Personae
xix -
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Chronology of Sherpa History
xxiii -
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CHAPTER I Introduction: The Project, the People, and the Problem
1 -
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CHAPTER II The Early History of the Sherpas: Fraternal Contradictions
19 -
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CHAPTER III The Founding of the First Sherpa Temple: Political Contradictions
45 -
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CHAPTER IV The Meaning of Temple Founding: Cultural Schemas
59 -
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CHAPTER V The Sherpas and the State
82 -
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CHAPTER VI The Political Economy of Monastery Foundings
99 -
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CHAPTER VII The Big People Found the Monasteries: Legitimation and Self-Worth
124 -
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CHAPTER VIII The Small People
150 -
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CHAPTER IX Monks and Nuns
168 -
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CHAPTER X Conclusions: Sherpa History and a Theory of Practice
193 -
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APPENDIX I Two Zombie Stories of Early Khumbu
203 -
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APPENDIX II Addendum to the Tengboche Chayik
205 -
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Notes
207 -
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Glossary
221 -
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References
225 -
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Index
237