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The Ends of Kinship: Connecting Himalayan lives between Nepal and New York

For centuries, people from Mustang, Nepal, have relied on agriculture, pastoralism, and trade as a way of life. Seasonal migrations to South Asian cities for trade as well as temporary wage labor abroad have shaped their experiences for decades. Yet, more recently, permanent migrations to New York City, where many have settled, are reshaping lives and social worlds. Mustang has experienced one of the highest rates of depopulation in contemporary Nepal—a profoundly visible depopulation that contrasts with the relative invisibility of Himalayan migrants in New York.

Drawing on more than two decades of fieldwork with people in and from Mustang, this book combines narrative ethnography and short fiction to engage with foundational questions in cultural anthropology: How do different generations abide with and understand each other? How are traditions defended and transformed in the context of new mobilities? Anthropologist Sienna Craig draws on khora, the Tibetan Buddhist notion of cyclic existence as well as the daily act of circumambulating the sacred, to think about cycles of movement and patterns of world-making, shedding light on how kinship remains both firm and flexible in the face of migration. From a high Himalayan kingdom to the streets of Brooklyn and Queens, The Ends of Kinship explores dynamics of migration and social change, asking how individuals, families, and communities care for each other and carve out spaces of belonging. It also speaks broadly to issues of immigration and diaspora; belonging and identity; and the nexus of environmental, economic, and cultural transformation.

Published by University of Washington Press under their Global South-Asia Series. Pick up the book here.


Author

Sienna R. Craig is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire (USA). She received her PhD in cultural anthropology from Cornell University in 2006. In addition to The Ends of Kinship, Craig is the author of Mustang in Black and Whitewith photographer Kevin Bubriski (2018), Healing Elements: Efficacy and the Social Ecologies of Tibetan Medicine (2012) and Horses Like Lightning: A Story of Passage through the Himalayas (2008). She is the co-editor of Medicine Between Science and Religion: Explorations on Tibetan Grounds (2010), and Studies of Medical Pluralism in Tibetan History and Society (2010), among other publications.

Craig enjoys writing across genres. Beyond her scholarly work, she has published poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction. Her children’s book, Clear Sky, Red Earth: A Himalayan Storyfeaturing artist Tenzin Norbu’s paintings, is in its third edition (2018) in English and has also been published in Tibetan (2011).  Craig has also collaborated with composer Andrea Clearfield, writing libretto for original works, including those that reflect Tibetan and Himalayan culture, Tse Go La and Khandroma.

Craig’s research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, and the Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, among other sources. From 2012-2017 she served as co-editor of HIMALAYAJournal of the Association for Nepal and Himalayan Studies. Craig is an Executive Council member of the International Association for the Study of Traditional Asian Medicine (IASTAM).


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