New from Asian Highlands Perspectives - AHP 31: The Lost World of Ladakh: Early Photographic Journeys through Indian Himalaya, 1931-1934
Randy LaPolla
randy.lapolla at gmail.com
Tue Jul 29 00:17:56 UTC 2014
Thanks very much, Nathan and Nancy for your very helpful replies!
Shobhana, I am sure there are other such projects. Anyone out there know of any?
(I'm sure you know of Terralingua (http://www.terralingua.org/).)
We here at NTU (a technological university very much into sustainability science) have been trying to get the funding and other agencies to recognise the human component in the issue of sustainability.
While not really about sustainability science in the abstract, there was Matthew McDaniel, who argued you have to save the people before you can save the language. He did much to try to improve the lives of the Akha people in a concrete way (building wells, schools, etc.) and stop them from having their land taken and from being killed by the Thai government.
Randy
On 28 Jul, 2014, at 11:27 pm, Chelliah, Shobhana <chelliah at unt.edu> wrote:
> Very interesting, Randy. I would like to hear more about this. I would like any help in highlighting the relationship between sustainability science and Documenting Endangered Langauges.
>
> Shobhana
>
> Shobhana L. Chelliah, Professor
> Department of Linguistics and Technical Communication
> P.O. Box 311307
> University of North Texas
> Denton, Texas 76203
> U.S.A.
> Phone: 940-565-4458, Fax: 940-565-4355
> From: The Tibeto-Burman Discussion List [tibeto-burman-linguistics at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG] on behalf of Randy LaPolla [randy.lapolla at gmail.com]
> Sent: Monday, July 28, 2014 4:31 AM
> To: TIBETO-BURMAN-LINGUISTICS at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG
> Subject: Re: New from Asian Highlands Perspectives - AHP 31: The Lost World of Ladakh: Early Photographic Journeys through Indian Himalaya, 1931-1934
>
> Speaking of Ladakh, many years ago (1980's) at Berkeley I heard a woman give a talk on "The Ladakhi Project", which was an attempt to get the people in Ladakh to stop moving toward a petroleum-based economy, and to help them go back to a self-sustaining economy with things such as solar stoves and whatnot. The project included writing a dictionary of the language. Does anyone know what happened to that project?
>
> Thanks,
> Randy
>
> On 28 Jul, 2014, at 2:55 pm, Gerald Roche <gjroche at GMAIL.COM> wrote:
>
>> Dear all,
>>
>>
>> The editors of Asian Highlands Perspectives are pleased to announce the publication of:
>>
>>
>> AHP 31: The Lost World of Ladakh: Early Photographic Journeys through Indian Himalaya, 1931-1934
>>
>>
>> By Rupert Wilmot, Roger Bates, and Nicky Harman, with a Foreword by Khenpo K. Rangdol, President of Tserkarmo Monastery, Ladakh, India.
>>
>>
>> The Lost World of Ladakh is a superb collection of 150 black-and-white photographs of 1930s Ladakh, capturing its final days as a hub of trade routes between Tibet and Kashmir, India and Yarkand. These portraits of people, landscapes and Buddhist ceremonies taken by amateur photographer Rupert Wilmot, are notable for their careful composition, fine detail and engaging informality. They have been meticulously researched and captioned by Nicky Harman and Roger Bates, respectively, niece and nephew of Rupert Wilmot, and include maps, an introduction and a bibliography. Of considerable historical and ethnographic interest.
>>
>>
>> The volume is available as an at-cost hard copy (28.29USD):
>> http://www.lulu.com/shop/roger-bates-and-nicky-harman-and-rupert-wilmot/ahp-31-the-lost-world-of-ladakh-early-photographic-journeys-in-indian-himalaya/paperback/product-21733172.html
>>
>>
>> …and as a free download:
>> http://plateauculture.org/sites/plateauculture.org/files/writing/lost-world-ladakh-early-photographic-journeys-indian-himalaya.pdf
>>
>>
>> …with an additional appendix:
>> http://plateauculture.org/writing/appendix-lost-world-ladakh
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> What other writers have said about The Lost World of Ladakh:
>> “A wonderfully elegaic set of photographs recording a lost world: an almost mediaeval Ladakh untouched by modernity and still living at the hub of the old trans-Himalayan trade routes, a timeless Central Asia where soot writing boards, itinerant monks, arcane astrologers, masked dancers and elaborate turquoise headdresses were still common. These skillfully restored photographs make me ache to cross again the snowy heights of the Zoji-la and to re-visit this most fascinating region to see what is left.”
>> William Dalrymple, author of Return of a King: The Battle for Afghanistan, 1839-42
>>
>>
>> “Rupert Wilmot’s pictures are a delight. The monastery images include a spectacular set of the religious dance-drama at Hemis. There is also a visual record of the trades that lifted so many of Ladakh's villagers above the poverty level: the bustle in Leh Bazaar, the interior of a serai, and caravans of sheep, donkeys and ponies. Perhaps the book’s most outstanding feature is the series of portraits of Wilmot’s fellow-travellers and other Ladakhis, most of them in relaxed and cheerful mode, rather than posing stiffly.”
>> Dr Janet Rizvi, writer and historian of Ladakh, Kashmir and the western Himalaya
>>
>> “These illustrations, superb as photographs in their own right, capture in visual form the essence of Ladakhi life as it was in the 1930s. While the Ladakh pictured here is in many ways gone, its legacy lives on in the distinctive culture of present-day Ladakh, which cannot be fully appreciated without a knowledge of its history. In this book we have a unique and vital contribution to that history.”
>> Dr Philip Denwood, Emeritus Reader in Tibetan Studies, SOAS, University of London
>>
>>
>> Claude Rupert Trench Wilmot (1897-1961) was a British army officer stationed in India during the 1930s, and a talented amateur photographer.
>>
>>
>> Nicky Harman translates Chinese literature, and was formerly a lecturer at Imperial College London.
>>
>>
>> Roger Bates digitized the photographs. A retired engineer, he has many years of experience working in digital photography.
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