Sherpas Through Their Rituals: 2 (Cambridge Studies in Cultural Systems)
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 8/3/1978
EAN 9780521292160, ISBN10: 0521292166
Paperback, 208 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.3 cm
Language: English
The Sherpas of the Himalayas practice Tibetan Buddhism, a variety of Mahayana Buddhism. This is a general interpretation of Sherpa culture through examining the relationship between the Sherpas' Buddhism and other aspects of their society, and a theoretical contribution to the study of ritual and religious symbolism. In analysing the symbols of Sherpa rituals, professor Ortner leads us toward the discovery of conflict, contradiction, and stress in the wider social and cultural world. Following a general ethnographic sketch, each chapter opens with a brief description of a ritual. The ritual is then dissected, and its symbolic elements are used as guides in the exploration of problematic structures, relationships, and ideas of the culture. The author uses these rituals to illuminate the interconnections between religious ideology, social structure and experience. Professor Ortner analysis of the rituals reveals both the Buddhist pull toward exaggerating the isolation of individuals, and the secular pull that attempts to overcome isolation and to reproduce the conditions for social community.
Preface
1. Introduction
some notes on ritual
2. The surface contours of the Sherpa world
3. Nyungne
problems of marriage, family and asceticism
4. Hospitality
problems of exchange, status and authority
5. Exorcisms
problems of wealth, pollution and reincarnation
6. Offering rituals
problems of religion, anger and social cooperation
7. Conclusions
Buddhism and society
Notes
Bibliography
Index.