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Market and Monastery
In the established historiography of trade in Asia, the emergence of Western trading empires invariably triggered the decline and dispersal of old trading networks. In this transregional ethnographic history of the Manangi, a Buddhist trading community from northern Nepal, Prista Ratanapruck provides counter evidence, elucidating how kinship, social, and religious institutions have facilitated the expansion of Manangi trade across South and Southeast Asia. Expounding on how social and moral values shape capital production, accumulation, and redistribution, Market and Monastery examines the entwining relationship between trade and the Manangi’s pursuit of social and spiritual aspirations, ultimately illuminating an intriguing form of capitalism.
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
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Part I. Nodes Abroad: The Social Geography of the Manangi Trade Diaspora
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Chapter 1. A Community of Traders
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Chapter 2. Manangi Rooming Houses Abroad
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Part II. Local and Translocal Economies and Societies
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Chapter 3. From Routes to Roots
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Chapter 4. Kinship Arrangements and Economic Expansion
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Chapter 5. Reinvestments in Nepal
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Part III. Nodes at Home: Institutionalized Religious and Social Gatherings
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Chapter 6. Money and Labor in Spiritual Transformation
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Chapter 7. Pooling Resources for Work and Play
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- Conclusion
- Glossary
- References
- Index
- 出版地 : 美國
- 語言 : 英文
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