Tibet’s Relations with the Himalaya
Siddiq Wahid (Ed.)
Foreword: Siddiq Wahid (Ed.)
About the Book
The Himalaya is a cornucopia and convergence of sovereign states, civilisational interaction and indigenous cultures across a stretch of two thousand miles. Its primary cultural influences have been that of Tibetan and Indic civilisations, respectively from the north and the south. Much too often this swath of mountainous and jungle frontier is seen as a territory for division between established states, without much thought to the major influences that impact the frontiers’ peoples and their aspirations.
The book affords a ‘mountain-top-view’ of the Himalaya from the perspectives of its peoples rather than exclusively those who have, over the years, come to possess its territories. All the contributors to this volume point out, directly or indirectly, that the Himalaya suffers from a discourse that originates and ends in the capitals of states in possession of Himalayan territory. It fervently advocates for a change from this habituated approach so that the everyday citizenry of the Himalaya are consulted. It recommends that their participation in the dialogue of the civilisations that are the present-day fabric of their lives, no matter from which direction, is critical for a harmonious region and, indeed, world.
About the Author(s) / Editor(s)
Siddiq Wahid is at present a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi. He was formerly Vice Chancellor of Islamic University, Kashmir; Gulab Singh Chair Professor of History, Jammu University and Director, Institute of Kashmir Studies, Kashmir University. He has taught in the US in his field of study, which are Central Asian and Tibetan History. Prof Wahid has published widely and the latest (2015) is a forthcoming chapter on historical Gilgit, Baltistan, Ladakh and Kashmir for an anthology of the Himalaya.
Contributors
Claude Arpi
Nani Bath
Sonam Joldan
Sanjay Chaturvedi
Ananta Swarup B. De Gurung
Sunanda K. Datta-Ray
Tashi Phuntsok
Sangeeta Thapliyal
Thubten Samphel
Chetan Singh
Bijay Thapa
Tshering Doma Kaleon
Man Norbu
Tenzin Norbu
About the Editor/Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I
Histories and Backdrop
1. Thresholds in the Wilderness: Identities, Interests
and Modernity in Western Himalayan Borderlands
Chetan Singh
2. Remapping Tibet: Colonial Cartographies, Neoliberal Geopolitics
and Return to Himalayan Human-Cultural Geographies
Sanjay Chaturvedi
3. Geopolitical Importance of Tibet
Thubten Samphel
4. Current Relationship between the Himalayan Region
and the Tibetan People
Tashi Phuntsok
II
Peoples and Linkages
5. History of the Dispute Between Tehri State and Tibet:
A Himalayan Case
Claude Arpi
6. Sikkim can be put in India but Tibet can’t be Taken out of Sikkim
Sunanda K. Datta-Ray
7. Historical Relationship between Tibet and Ladakh:
Some Important Sustaining Factors
Sonam Joldan
8. Trans-Himalayan Cultural Linkages: India-Nepal-China
Sangeeta Thapliyal
9. Tibet’s Relation with Tawang: A Factor for Chinese Claim
and People’s Perception on it
Nani Bath and Man Norbu
10. An Identity in Flux: Tibetans in Sikkim and Darjeeling Hills
Bijay Thapa
11. Border Trade Through Nathu-la: Reviving and Rebuilding
Historical Trade Linkages
Tshering Doma Kaleon
III
Environment
12. Tibet: The Third Pole and the Himalaya
Tenzin Norbu
13. Tibet and Security Implications for China: A Brief Appraisal
Ananta Swarup Bijendra De Gurung
Index
| Publisher | AF Press |
| Publication Date | 2017 |
| Number of Pages | 300 |
| ISBN |
9789332703124 |
Academic Foundation (AF), based in New Delhi, is India’s leading independent publisher of academic/scholarly books in Social Sciences, specialising in Economics—Development Economics and Indian Economy in particular, and allied subjects.
About the Book
The Himalaya is a cornucopia and convergence of sovereign states, civilisational interaction and indigenous cultures across a stretch of two thousand miles. Its primary cultural influences have been that of Tibetan and Indic civilisations, respectively from the north and the south. Much too often this swath of mountainous and jungle frontier is seen as a territory for division between established states, without much thought to the major influences that impact the frontiers’ peoples and their aspirations.
The book affords a ‘mountain-top-view’ of the Himalaya from the perspectives of its peoples rather than exclusively those who have, over the years, come to possess its territories. All the contributors to this volume point out, directly or indirectly, that the Himalaya suffers from a discourse that originates and ends in the capitals of states in possession of Himalayan territory. It fervently advocates for a change from this habituated approach so that the everyday citizenry of the Himalaya are consulted. It recommends that their participation in the dialogue of the civilisations that are the present-day fabric of their lives, no matter from which direction, is critical for a harmonious region and, indeed, world.
About the Author(s) / Editor(s)
Siddiq Wahid is at present a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi. He was formerly Vice Chancellor of Islamic University, Kashmir; Gulab Singh Chair Professor of History, Jammu University and Director, Institute of Kashmir Studies, Kashmir University. He has taught in the US in his field of study, which are Central Asian and Tibetan History. Prof Wahid has published widely and the latest (2015) is a forthcoming chapter on historical Gilgit, Baltistan, Ladakh and Kashmir for an anthology of the Himalaya.
Contributors
Claude Arpi
Nani Bath
Sonam Joldan
Sanjay Chaturvedi
Ananta Swarup B. De Gurung
Sunanda K. Datta-Ray
Tashi Phuntsok
Sangeeta Thapliyal
Thubten Samphel
Chetan Singh
Bijay Thapa
Tshering Doma Kaleon
Man Norbu
Tenzin Norbu
About the Editor/Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I
Histories and Backdrop
1. Thresholds in the Wilderness: Identities, Interests
and Modernity in Western Himalayan Borderlands
Chetan Singh
2. Remapping Tibet: Colonial Cartographies, Neoliberal Geopolitics
and Return to Himalayan Human-Cultural Geographies
Sanjay Chaturvedi
3. Geopolitical Importance of Tibet
Thubten Samphel
4. Current Relationship between the Himalayan Region
and the Tibetan People
Tashi Phuntsok
II
Peoples and Linkages
5. History of the Dispute Between Tehri State and Tibet:
A Himalayan Case
Claude Arpi
6. Sikkim can be put in India but Tibet can’t be Taken out of Sikkim
Sunanda K. Datta-Ray
7. Historical Relationship between Tibet and Ladakh:
Some Important Sustaining Factors
Sonam Joldan
8. Trans-Himalayan Cultural Linkages: India-Nepal-China
Sangeeta Thapliyal
9. Tibet’s Relation with Tawang: A Factor for Chinese Claim
and People’s Perception on it
Nani Bath and Man Norbu
10. An Identity in Flux: Tibetans in Sikkim and Darjeeling Hills
Bijay Thapa
11. Border Trade Through Nathu-la: Reviving and Rebuilding
Historical Trade Linkages
Tshering Doma Kaleon
III
Environment
12. Tibet: The Third Pole and the Himalaya
Tenzin Norbu
13. Tibet and Security Implications for China: A Brief Appraisal
Ananta Swarup Bijendra De Gurung
Index
| Publisher | AF Press |
| Publication Date | 2017 |
| Number of Pages | 300 |
| ISBN |
9789332703124 |
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Tibet’s Relations with the Himalaya