The Focus: Road Horizons in the Himalaya
GROS, Stéphane
Centre d'Études Himalayennes [CEH]
Centre d'études sud asiatiques et himalayennes [CESAH]
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique [CNRS]
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Centre d'Études Himalayennes [CEH]
Centre d'études sud asiatiques et himalayennes [CESAH]
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique [CNRS]
GROS, Stéphane
Centre d'Études Himalayennes [CEH]
Centre d'études sud asiatiques et himalayennes [CESAH]
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique [CNRS]
< Réduire
Centre d'Études Himalayennes [CEH]
Centre d'études sud asiatiques et himalayennes [CESAH]
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique [CNRS]
Langue
en
Autre document
Ce document a été publié dans
IIAS Newsletters. 2024-03
International Institute for Asian Studies
Résumé en anglais
In this Focus, we look at roads broadly speaking as they epitomise the diverse pathways through and around which people devise their own sense of belonging and becoming. The articles assembled, presented initially for the ...Lire la suite >
In this Focus, we look at roads broadly speaking as they epitomise the diverse pathways through and around which people devise their own sense of belonging and becoming. The articles assembled, presented initially for the conference “Himalayan Journeys,” are ethnographically informed case studies about people’s mobile engagement with their social and physical landscape. Trails or roads, well-travelled or in progress, are here considered “pathways of sociality,” sites for exchange that convey human relationships and values, as well as sites of expectations, cooperation, and competition. Roads exemplify ambivalent successes and failures; some become dead ends literally and metaphorically, while others remain full of promise.< Réduire
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche