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ID188577
Title ProperSurviving Pemakö’s pluriverse
Other Title InformationKunga Tsomo, the goddess, and the LAC
LanguageENG
AuthorGamble, Ruth
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article traces a multi-generation history of Kunga Tsomo’s family, from the early 1900s when her grandmother migrated to Pemakö in the eastern Himalaya until the twenty-first century. Grandmother’s journey to Pemakö was part of a larger Vajrayana Buddhist migration to “hidden lands” in the southern Himalaya. This movement is most often framed as a religious event, but also involved the dispossession of Indigenous peoples, including the Adi of southern Pemakö. After coming to a negotiated settlement over land, the newly arrived Vajrayana Buddhists and Adi lived in neighboring villages within different ontologies. But soon after this settlement, a series of external states and institutions colonized Pemakö. The British and Qing Empires sent military expeditions in the 1910s. In the 1930s, the Tibetans annexed the territory. In the 1950s, it was bifurcated by the Sino-Indian border dispute. In the twenty-first century, it has become a site of a contest between international conservation campaigns and Chinese and Indian hydropower extraction. Despite the transformative effects of these external powers, this is not a story of cultural erasure. The article shows how the family’s commitment to Pemakö, its land and its multiple cultures has helped them survive and thrive.
`In' analytical NoteCritical Asian Studies Vol. 54, No.3; Sep 2022: p.398-421
Journal SourceCritical Asian Studies 2022-09 54, 3
Key WordsGeopolitics ;  Himalaya ;  Colonization ;  Extraction ;  Ethnohistory