Home Page Icon
Home Page
Table of Contents for
Mindscaping the Landscape of Tibet
Close
Mindscaping the Landscape of Tibet
by Dan Smyer Yü
Mindscaping the Landscape of Tibet
Religion and Society
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Table of Contents
Chapter One Introduction: Placiality of Tibet
1.1 Contextualizing Tibetas a “Hot Spot” and a “Power Place”
1.2 Mindscaping the Tibetan landscape
1.2.1 Mindscape
1.2.2 Landscape, place, and placiality
1.2.3 Eco-aesthetics
1.2.4 Affordances
1.3 A geographic navigation of my fieldwork
1.3.1 Beijing
1.3.2 Qinghai
1.3.3 Lhasa and Shangrila
1.4 Mapping the book
Chapter Two Geopoetics of place, gods,and people in Sambha ()
2.1 Eco-aesthetics of an outsider looking in
2.2 Geopoetic affordances of the Tibetan landscape
2.3 Sambha mandalized
2.4 Inter-dwelling with gods and spirits
2.5 Ancestral rootedness of Sambha and beyond
2.6 “Place has its own being…”
Chapter Three - Confessions of an Inner Liberation
3.1 The second Long March
3.2 Elation and desolationin the eco-sublime Tibetan landscape
3.3 Communist “liberation theology”
3.4 Puzzling statistics and the social scene of Old Lhasa
3.5 Searching for serfs in the midst of the “black bones”and the “white bones”
3.6 The clash of Marxist class struggle and Buddhist fate
3.7 Reminiscing about Old Tibet’s enchantments
Chapter Four Memorability of placeamong anti-traditionalists
4.1 “Pulling one hair moves the entire body”
4.2 Forgetting as Remembering
4.3 Subalternity of radical modernism
4.4 Pathogenic force of modernity
4.5 Placial antecedence of the Subaltern
Chapter Five Touching the skinof modern Tibet in the New Tibetan Cinema
5.1 Initiating cinematic landscape of a Buddhist Tibet
5.1.1 Repairing Buddhist moral fabric in The Grassland
5.1.2 Landscaping Buddhism in The Silent Holy Stone
5.2 Touching the Skin of the Modern Tibetan Landscape
5.2.1 Rescuing the Buddhist “soul” of the nation in The Search
5.2.2 A modern Tibet in Old Dog
5.3 After-effects and affordances of the New Tibetan Cinema
Chapter Six Ensouling the Mountain
6.1 “Wherever I travel I can’t wait to rush home!”
6.2 “You know the origin of my ancestors”
6.3 “Machen Bomra [] is a living being”
6.4 “Bury them here…”
6.5 “Eco-aesthetics of Touching and Being Touched”
Chapter Seven Drifting in the Miragesof the Tibetan Landscape
7.1 Tibet, branding a mindscape of utopia
7.1.1 An American experience
7.1.2 A Chinese experience
7.2 Tibet, branded as a dreamworld
7.3 Seeking material empowerments in the dreamworld
7.4 Drifting in the Mirages of the Tibetan Landscape
7.4.1 Geo-poetic affordance
7.4.2 Utopian attributes of Tibet
7.4.3 Escape, self-exile and metamorphosis in “magical Tibet”
Chapter Eight - Conclusion – Mindscaping Tibetophilia
8.1 The missing Orient in Post-Orientalism
8.2 Tibet as a geopsychic terrain
8.3 Tibetophilia, topophilia, and eco-aesthetics revisited
8.4 An anthropological mindscape of Tibet
References
Index
Search in book...
Toggle Font Controls
Playlists
Add To
Create new playlist
Name your new playlist
Playlist description (optional)
Cancel
Create playlist
Sign In
Email address
Password
Forgot Password?
Create account
Login
or
Continue with Facebook
Continue with Google
Sign Up
Full Name
Email address
Confirm Email Address
Password
Login
Create account
or
Continue with Facebook
Continue with Google
Prev
Previous Chapter
Index
1
The original sentence is
. It implies a domino effect.
Add Highlight
No Comment
..................Content has been hidden....................
You can't read the all page of ebook, please click
here
login for view all page.
Day Mode
Cloud Mode
Night Mode
Reset