ABSTRACT
The Routledge Handbook of Highland Asia is the first comprehensive and critical overview of the ethnographic and anthropological work in Highland Asia over the past half a century. Opening up a grand new space for critical engagement, the handbook presents Highland Asia as a world-region that cuts across the traditional divides inherited from colonial and Cold War area divisions - the Indian Subcontinent/South Asia, Southeast Asia, China/East Asia, and Central Asia.
Thirty-two chapters assess the history of research, identify ethnographic trends, and evaluate a range of analytical themes that developed in particular settings of Highland Asia. They cover varied landscapes and communities, from Kyrgyzstan to India, from Bhutan to Vietnam and bring local voices and narratives relating trade and tribute, ritual and resistance, pilgrimage and prophecy, modernity and marginalization, capital and cosmos to the fore. The handbook shows that for millennia, Highland Asians have connected far-flung regions through movements of peoples, goods and ideas, and at all times have been the enactors, repositories, and mediators of world-historical processes. Taken together, the contributors and chapters subvert dominant lowland narratives by privileging primarily highland vantages that reveal Highland Asia as an ecumune and prism that refracts and generates global history, social theory, and human imagination. In the currently unfolding Asian Century, this compels us to reorient and re-envision Highland Asia, in ethnography, in theory, and in the connections between this world-region, made of hills, highlands and mountains, and a planetary context.
The handbook reveals both regional commonalities and diversities, generalities and specificities, and a broad orientation to key themes in the region. An indispensable reference work, this handbook fills a significant gap in the literature and will be of interest to academics, researchers and students interested in Highland Asia, Zomia Studies, Anthropology, Comparative Politics, Conceptual History and Sociology, Southeast Asian Studies, Central Asian Studies and South Asian Studies as well as Asian Studies in general.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part Section 1|50 pages
Sino-Tibetan Mountains
chapter 2|13 pages
The Middle Highlands of modern China as a historical inter-Asian Zomia
part Section 2|48 pages
Central Asian Mountains and Western Himalaya
part Section 3|56 pages
Central Himalaya
chapter 10|13 pages
Forming communities and negotiating power in a highland borderland
chapter 11|15 pages
Infrastructures of change
chapter 13|13 pages
Ethnographies of the Sherpas in the High Himalaya
part Section 4|52 pages
Eastern Himalaya
chapter 15|12 pages
The desire to be ‘primitive'
part Section 5|90 pages
Bengal-Indo-Burma Highlands
chapter 18|12 pages
Highlanders and lowlanders in Bangladesh
chapter 19|13 pages
Peopling the Yunnan-Bengal corridor
chapter 24|12 pages
Gendering Kachinland
part Section 6|114 pages
Southeast Asian Massif