1. Vincanne Adams, University of California San Francisco, USA.
2. Mona Schrempf, University of Westminster London, UK.
3. Sienna R. Craig, Dartmouth College, USA.
摘要
There is a growing interest in studies that document the relationship between science and medicine - as ideas, practices, technologies and outcomes - across cultural, national, geographic terrain. Tibetan medicine is not only known as a scholarly medical tradition among other Asian medical systems, with many centuries of technological, clinical, and pharmacological innovation; it also survives today as a complex medical resource across many Asian nations - from India and Bhutan to Mongolia, Tibet (TAR) and China, Buryatia - as well as in Western Europe and the Americas. The contributions to this volume explore, in equal measure, the impacts of western science and biomedicine on Tibetan grounds - i.e., among Tibetans across China, the Himalaya and exile communities as well as in relation to globalized Tibetan medicine - and the ways that local practices change how such “science” gets done, and how this continually hybridized medical knowledge is transmitted and put into practice. As such, this volume contributes to explorations into the bi-directional flows of medical knowledge and practice.
目次
List of Illustrations List of Figures and Maps Acknowledgements Notes on Transliteration Notes on Contributors Chapter 1. Introduction: Medicine in Translation between Science and Religion 1 PART I: HISTORIES OF TIBETAN MEDICAL MODERNITIES Chapter 2. Biomedicine in Tibet at the Edge of Modernity 33 Chapter 3. Tibetan Medicine and Russian Modernities 57 PART II: PRODUCING SCIENCE, TRUTH AND MEDICAL MORALITIES Chapter 4. Navigating ‘Modern Science’ and ‘Traditional Culture’: The Dharamsala Men-Tsee-Khang in India 83 Chapter 5. A Tibetan Way of Science: Revisioning Biomedicine as Tibetan Practice 107 Chapter 6. Correlating Biomedical and Tibetan Medical Concepts in Amchi Medical Practice 127 PART III: THERAPEUTIC RITUALS AND SITUATED CHOICES Chapter 7. Between Mantra and Syringe: Healing and Health-Seeking Behaviour in Contemporary Amdo 157 Chapter 8. The Extension of Obstetrics In Ladakh 185 Chapter 9. From Empowerments to Power Calculations: Notes on Efficacy, Value, and Method 215 PART IV: RESEARCH IN TRANSLATION Chapter 10. Qualitative and Quantitative Research Methodology in Tibetan Medicine: History, Background, and Development of Research in Sowa Rigpa 245 Chapter 11. The Four Tantras and the Global Market: Changing Epistemologies of Drä (’bras) versus Cancer 265 Chapter 12. Re-integrating the Dharmic Perspective in Bio-Behavioural Research of a Tibetan Yoga (tsalung trükhor) Intervention for People with Cancer 297 Chapter 13. Epilogue: Towards a Sowa Rigpa Sensibility 319 Index 337