The accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)

<p>The Tibetan literary corpus offers a wide array of (auto)biographical accounts; Tibetans have been recollecting – and narrating – life stories in earnest since the "later diffusion" (Tib. <em>phyi dar</em>) of Buddhism in the 11<sup>th</sup> century. The hy...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Galli, LMS
Other Authors: Roesler, U
Format: Thesis
Language:Tibetan
English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
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author Galli, LMS
author2 Roesler, U
author_facet Roesler, U
Galli, LMS
author_sort Galli, LMS
collection OXFORD
description <p>The Tibetan literary corpus offers a wide array of (auto)biographical accounts; Tibetans have been recollecting – and narrating – life stories in earnest since the "later diffusion" (Tib. <em>phyi dar</em>) of Buddhism in the 11<sup>th</sup> century. The hybrid essence of life writing, suspended between fact and fiction, finds a perfect expression in the text at the core of the present dissertation, i.e. the journal (Tib. <em>nyin deb</em>) of a 20th century Khams pa trader, Kha stag 'Dzam yag. The text records the events, travels, and impressions experienced by the author between 1944 and 1956; structured like a diary, this autodiegetic text, originally written in a scroll-paper format, was later edited and finally published in India in 1997.</p> <p>Two different heuristic devices, i.e. narratology and socio-economic analysis, are used in the present dissertation to analyse the structure and content of the <em>nyin deb</em>, as well as the author's idiosyncrasies emerging from the process of narrativisation. Whereas the narratological approach allows the identification of the interplay of memory, self, and culture in the socio-historical context of mid-20th century Tibet, the socio-economic analysis reflects on the <em>nyin deb</em> as a form of social history rather than personal narrative. The identification of "true", historical facts confirms the author's claims to factuality, thus providing unique information and insight regarding the political and economic role of Khams pa traders in 1940s-1950s Tibet, as well as the development of new pilgrimage rituals and the emergence of forms of "spiritual tourism" in modern India.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:28e5ea72-794c-443e-b626-651a71a0974a2024-12-01T19:58:53ZThe accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:28e5ea72-794c-443e-b626-651a71a0974aTibetan and Himalayan StudiesTibetanEnglishORA Deposit2017Galli, LMSRoesler, U<p>The Tibetan literary corpus offers a wide array of (auto)biographical accounts; Tibetans have been recollecting – and narrating – life stories in earnest since the "later diffusion" (Tib. <em>phyi dar</em>) of Buddhism in the 11<sup>th</sup> century. The hybrid essence of life writing, suspended between fact and fiction, finds a perfect expression in the text at the core of the present dissertation, i.e. the journal (Tib. <em>nyin deb</em>) of a 20th century Khams pa trader, Kha stag 'Dzam yag. The text records the events, travels, and impressions experienced by the author between 1944 and 1956; structured like a diary, this autodiegetic text, originally written in a scroll-paper format, was later edited and finally published in India in 1997.</p> <p>Two different heuristic devices, i.e. narratology and socio-economic analysis, are used in the present dissertation to analyse the structure and content of the <em>nyin deb</em>, as well as the author's idiosyncrasies emerging from the process of narrativisation. Whereas the narratological approach allows the identification of the interplay of memory, self, and culture in the socio-historical context of mid-20th century Tibet, the socio-economic analysis reflects on the <em>nyin deb</em> as a form of social history rather than personal narrative. The identification of "true", historical facts confirms the author's claims to factuality, thus providing unique information and insight regarding the political and economic role of Khams pa traders in 1940s-1950s Tibet, as well as the development of new pilgrimage rituals and the emergence of forms of "spiritual tourism" in modern India.</p>
spellingShingle Tibetan and Himalayan Studies
Galli, LMS
The accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)
title The accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)
title_full The accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)
title_fullStr The accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)
title_full_unstemmed The accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)
title_short The accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar: the account of tshong dpon Kha stag ʼDzam yag’s travels through Tibet, Nepal, and India (1944-1956)
title_sort accidental pilgrimage of a rich beggar the account of tshong dpon kha stag dzam yag s travels through tibet nepal and india 1944 1956
topic Tibetan and Himalayan Studies
work_keys_str_mv AT gallilms theaccidentalpilgrimageofarichbeggartheaccountoftshongdponkhastagʼdzamyagstravelsthroughtibetnepalandindia19441956
AT gallilms accidentalpilgrimageofarichbeggartheaccountoftshongdponkhastagʼdzamyagstravelsthroughtibetnepalandindia19441956