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Bhutan

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Bhutan: Ways of Knowing challenges the romanticized image of Bhutan as a mystical Shangri-la, instead offering an authentic perspective shaped by Bhutanese voices. Through essays, interviews, and p...
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  • 09 December 2008
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There is a misty-eyed vision of Bhutan which has popularized it as ‘the last Shangri-la’, the hidden Himalayan jewel, the travel destination of celebrities and unique-experience-hunters. We are not entirely comfortable with this image. Bhutan has undoubtedly become the focus of considerable media attention in the last few years. Articles appear regularly on its substitution of happiness for money as the indicator of the country’s wealth. Television programs, books, visits by personalities – all have served to bring Bhutan to global awareness. This attention only serves to increase pressure on the culture to become like any other. How has Bhutan resisted the impact of globalisation which has had such a homogenizing affect on most other countries in the world? A practice, until recently, of self-imposed isolation from the rest of the world, the Buddhist tradition, and the lack of any successful foreign invader have combined to produce a living culture that is as unique as it is fragile. This fragility suggested the need to document a context that seemed on the verge of change. Our second visit in 2008 confirmed our sense of immanent change, as we could see for ourselves the ways in which ‘international culture’ was beginning to appear: the first escalator in the country, widening the main road from single track to dual carriageway, the first democratic election, the availability of satellite television, and internet expansion... Nevertheless, we continue to feel that in Bhutan there is a different ‘way of knowing.’ We have worked with staff at the University to try to capture something of this in three different forms: • chapters written by Bhutanese individuals about the culture, landscape, education and folklore • extracts from interviews with university staff and associates to draw out particular characteristics of Bhutan which would be of interest to Western readers • photographs of Bhutan which provide a different ‘view’ of the country to complement the text. The subject matter has been chosen by Bhutanese staff at the Royal University of Bhutan as an expression of their understanding of their own land. There are conventional travel books about Bhutan available and we have not attempted to contribute to this literature. Bhutan: Ways of Knowing is a book which reflects Bhutanese understanding of their country. We hope that you will find these contributions as interesting and thought-provoking as we do, and that you, too, will find a different way of knowing about Bhutan.
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Price: $110.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Information Age Publishing
Publication Date: 09 December 2008
ISBN: 9781593117351
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: EDUCATION / General, Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy, Cultural studies
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Foreword; Dasho Pema Thinley
Introduction
Section I. Education
Chapter 1. Learning to Know, In Bhutan; Frank Rennie
Chapter 2. A Bhutanese Learning Abroad; Yangka
Chapter 3. A Window on Bhutan; Dawa Lhamo and Diki Wangmo
Chapter 4. The Monastic Education; Jagar Dorji
Chapter 5. My Mother and My Daughter; Tulsi Gurung
Chapter 6. Shared Metaphors, Shared Dreams; Kunzang Choden
Chapter 7. Going to Iskoori; Jagar Dorji
Section II. Folklore
Chapter 8. Living with Folklore; Frank Rennie
Chapter 9. Culture and Bhutan; Dasho Sangay Wangchuk
Chapter 10. Festivals; Dorje Tshering
Chapter 11. The Power of Bhutanese Folk Literature; Dorji Thinley
Chapter 12. The Metaphorical World of Archery; Karna Pedey
Chapter 13. The Bhutanese Menu; Dawa Lhamo
Chapter 14. The Significance of Rimdro in Bhutan; Singye Namgyel
Chapter 15. Living by Traditions; Jagar Dorji
Chapter 16. Superstition; Kezang Sherab and Kinzing Lhendup
Chapter 17. The Marriage System in Lower Kheng; Dr. Penjor
Section III. Landscape
Chapter 18. Being in the Landscape of Bhutan; Frank Rennie
Chapter 19. Traditional Medicine; Leki Wangchuk
Chapter 20. Farming Practices; Phub Dorji
Chapter 21. Place Names and Their Meaning; Jagar Dorji
Chapter 22. Chortens; Dawa Lhamo
Chapter 23. Punakha Dzong; Karma Gayleg
Chapter 24. Organic Farming in Bhutan; Tulsi Gurung
Chapter 25. Birds of Bhutan: The Significance, Status and Conservation; Tshering Dorji
Chapter 26. Food Crops of Bhutan; Karma Lhendup
Section IV. Culture
Chapter 27. A Society in Change; Frank Rennie
Chapter 28. Literature in Bhutan; Kunsang Choden
Chapter 29. Information Technology and Bhutan; Tenxin Choeda
Chapter 30. A Cross Cultural Comparison; R. Balamurugan and Sonam Tobgay
Chapter 31. No Longer the Ploughman’s Song; Dorji Thinley
Chapter 32. Gha-key (Happiness), Gandhi, and Buddhism; Tshering Dorji
Chapter 33. New Arrivals; Manikala Laygoi
Chapter 34. Beautiful Experiences; Rekha Chhetri
List of Authors
List of Interviewees