Sensory Biographies: Lives and Deaths Among Nepal’s Yolmo Buddhists

Etukansi
University of California Press, 3.3.2003 - 396 sivua
Robert Desjarlais's graceful ethnography explores the life histories of two Yolmo elders, focusing on how particular sensory orientations and modalities have contributed to the making and the telling of their lives. These two are a woman in her late eighties known as Kisang Omu and a Buddhist priest in his mid-eighties known as Ghang Lama, members of an ethnically Tibetan Buddhist people whose ancestors have lived for three centuries or so along the upper ridges of the Yolmo Valley in north central Nepal.

It was clear through their many conversations that both individuals perceived themselves as nearing death, and both were quite willing to share their thoughts about death and dying. The difference between the two was remarkable, however, in that Ghang Lama's life had been dominated by motifs of vision, whereas Kisang Omu's accounts of her life largely involved a "theatre of voices." Desjarlais offers a fresh and readable inquiry into how people's ways of sensing the world contribute to how they live and how they recollect their lives.
 

Sisältö

Kurāgraphy
1
Hardship Comfort
20
TwentySeven Ways of Looking at Vision
54
Startled into Alertness
102
A Theater of Voices
133
Ive Gotten Old
152
Essays on Dying
161
Dying Is This
176
Mirror of Deeds
236
Here and There
245
Ragged Woman
255
Echoes of a Life
275
A Sons Death
309
The End of the Body
315
Last Words
328
Notes
353

The Painful Between
182
Desperation
189
The Time of Dying
201
Death Envisioned
206
To Phungboche by Force
219
Staying Still
230
Glossary of Terms
375
References
379
Acknowledgments
389
Index
393
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Robert Desjarlais is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Sarah Lawrence College. His most recent book is Shelter Blues (1997), for which he won the Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing.

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