1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910467601003321

Autore

Kapstein Matthew

Titolo

The Tibetans [[electronic resource]] / Matthew T. Kapstein

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Malden, Mass., : Blackwell Pub., c2006

ISBN

1-118-72538-7

1-118-72537-9

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (386 p.)

Collana

The Peoples of Asia

Disciplina

951/.5

Soggetti

Electronic books.

Tibet Autonomous Region (China) Civilization

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Cover ; Title Page ; Contents; List of Figures ; List of Maps ; Preface; Acknowledgments; A Note on Transcription and Translation; 1 The Vessel and Its Contents ; High Peaks, Pure Earth; Peasants, Nomads, and Traders; The Tibetan Language; 2 Prehistory and Early Legends ; Sources of Archeological Evidence; Children of the Ape and the Ogress; Tibetan Religion before Buddhism; 3 The Tsenpo's Imperial Dominion ; The Rise of the Tibetan Empire; Later Monarchs and the Promotion of Buddhism; The Empire's Implosion; 4 Fragmentation and Hegemonic Power ; Dynastic Successors and the Kingdom of GugeĢ

The Buddhist RenaissanceMongols and Tibetan Buddhists; Successive Hegemonies; Tibetan Buddhism and the Ming Court; 5 The Rule of the Dalai Lamas ; Monastics and Monarchs; Between Mongols and Manchus; Regency and Retreat; Cultural Developments in Eastern Tibet; The Life and Times of the Great Thirteenth; 6 Tibetan Society ; Property, Economy, and Social Class; Government and Law; Marriage and Kinship; Women in Traditional Tibet; 7 Religious Life and Thought ; Propitiation, Therapy, and the Life-cycle ; Buddhist Basics; Monastic Institutions and Education; Tantrism and Yoga

Major Orders and SchoolsFestivals, Pilgrimages, and Ritual Cycles; 8 The Sites of Knowledge ; The Speech-Goddess's Mirror ; To Form Body, Speech, and Mind; Medicine, Astronomy, and the Divinatory Sciences; 9 Tibet in the Modern World ; The End of Traditional Tibet ; Rebellion and Exile; The Promise and Peril of Century's End; Notes; Spellings of



Tibetan Names and Terms; Bibliography; Index

Sommario/riassunto

""In the past, for largely geographical reasons, Tibet was isolated from the rest of the world, which meant that our country, people and culture were not only shrouded in mystery, but often gravely misunderstood. More recently, as interest has grown, scholarship concerning Tibet has improved beyond expectation, although it has often singled out narrow topics for consideration. In producing this substantial book, which takes a broad view of Tibetans and their civilization, within a long historical perspective, Matthew Kapstein has brought to his work the authority and clarity he has acquired th