ABSTRACT

The focus of the study is the Tibetan and Tibetanized border populations in the little known Himalayan high-valley of Nyishang in West Central Nepal close to the Tibetan border. There, a group of traders have greatly extended their external relations over the past century in the form of long-distance trade ventures, thereby thoroughly changing the internal conditions of socio-economic organizations in their home district. The object of the study is to establish whether larger geohistorical processes of structural change may be conceptualized in such a way as to link structuration at the level of the localized social group to the dynamics of the wider regional setting.

chapter 2|34 pages

A short geopolitical history of Tibet

chapter 3|44 pages

The regionality of Tibet

chapter 4|49 pages

The geohistory of Tibetan trade

chapter 5|28 pages

The Nyishangba of Manang

chapter 7|23 pages

Post-1962 developments

chapter 8|11 pages

Structured flux and hidden vistas