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ID132286
Title ProperInnovation in traditions of transformation
Other Title Informationpreliminary survey of a quarter century of change in the Bahahs and Bahis of the Kathmandu Valley
LanguageENG
AuthorOwens, Bruce Mccoy
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Newar monastic compounds of the Kathmandu Valley (b?h??s and bah?s) are the centres of what is arguably the world's oldest continuously practised form of Buddhism. This article presents a preliminary analysis of a survey that revisited these compounds 25 years after the publication of John Locke's exhaustive study in order to understand how these fundamental institutions of Newar Buddhism have been affected by the radical transformations that Nepalese society has undergone since then. It suggests that Newar practitioners of the dharma have often expressed their devotion in ways that are at once traditional and vitally innovative, transforming these compounds as well as the means through which they transform them in myriad ways. The conspicuous democratisation of sponsorship of 'repairs' has resulted in alterations that conform to notions of authenticity-old and new, Newar and foreign-as well as deliberate departures from tradition.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol.37, No.1; March 2014: p.130-155
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol.37, No.1; March 2014: p.130-155
Key WordsNewar ;  Nepal ;  Kathmandu Valley ;  Monastery ;  Vih?ra ;  B?h?? ;  Bah? ;  Vajray?na ;  Buddhism ;  Preliminary Analysis ;  Nepali Identities ;  Radical Transformations ;  Nepali Society ;  Dilemma ;  Religious Tradition ;  Monastic Communities ;  Social Interaction ;  Historic Preservation ;  Devotional Transformation