Trade and contemporary society along the silk road: an ethno-history of Ladakh
Material type:
- 9780415775557
- 305.800954 FEW
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 305.800954 FEW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 99313 |
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305.800954 AOI Rethinking tribal culture and development | 305.800954 BEC Becoming minority : how discourses and policies produce miniorities in Europe and India | 305.800954 DIV Diversity, ethnicity and identity in South Asia | 305.800954 FEW Trade and contemporary society along the silk road: an ethno-history of Ladakh | 305.800954 GEN Gender and diversity : | 305.800954 GUP Tribal contemporary issues : | 305.800954 INT Internal conflicts: a four state analysis (Inda, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Myanmar) |
This book provides an ethno-historical study of the trade system in Ladakh (India), a busy entrepôt for Silk Route trade between Central and South Asia. Previously a part of global networks, Ladakh became an isolated border area as national boundaries were defined and enforced in the mid-20th century. As trade with Central Asia ended, social life in Ladakh was irrevocably altered.
The author's research combines anthropological, historical, and archaeological methods of investigation, using data from primary documents, ethnographic interviews and participation-observation fieldwork. The result is a cultural history of South and Central Asia, detailing the social lives of historical Ladakhi traders and identifying their community as a cosmopolitan social group. The relationship between the historical narratives and the modern ethnographic context illustrates how social issues in modern communities are related to those of the past. It is demonstrated that this relationship depends on both memories, narratives about the past constructed within present social contexts, and legacies, ways in which the past continues to shape present social interactions.
This book will be of particular interest to anthropologists, historians and specialists in South and Central Asian studies, as well as those interested in historical archaeology, science, sociology, political science and economics.
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