Exhibition "Yak, Milk and Women ― Life of Tibetan Pastoralists"

May 10, 2017 – May 21, 2017 (except May 15 and 16)

Agriculture and livestock farming have been practiced in Tibet since ancient times owing to the elevation and characteristics of the land. Farmers and pastoralists differ in the ways in which they earn their livelihoods, and there are also differences in their thinking and customs. In addition, repeated changes in other factors, such as religion, history, politics, and economics, have given form to a variety of different cultures. In order to understand the background of this multilayered Tibetan civilization, it is critical to have a perspective that looks at the living of the common people, whose ways of life are rooted in the land itself. This exhibition introduces the "present" state of pastoralists living with their livestock in the Amdo region of Northeast Tibet from a variety of perspectives.

Information
Period May 10, 2017 - May 21, 2017 (except May 15 and 16)
Hours 12:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. (weekdays)
11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. (Saturday and Sunday)
Place Event Space & Café KICHIMU
Admission Free (Please order one drink.)
Jointly sponsored by - Linguistic Dynamics Science 3 (LingDy3), ILCAA, TUFS
- CHEESE SCHOOL ASSOCIATION
- KAKEN "Compilation of an ethnographic dictionary of Tibetan nomadic vocabulary based on the study of Tibetan nomads' wisdom of living"
- ILCAA Joint Research Project Study of Tibetan pastoral culture in Qinghai and its change: Based on the method of documentary linguistics, TUFS
HP http://www.cheese-marathon.com/tibet
General Inquiries E-mail:info-lingdy[at]aacore.net
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Poster
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