Using ethnographic materials and documents from East Tibetan villages, this book addresses the impact of modernization on everyday life and the ways in which it melds with traditional forms of knowledge to create a new Tibetan identity and scientific rationality.
Including cases centred on meteorology, geography, and seismology, the book assesses a wide range of traditional local activities, including foraging, farming, and domestic practices, and argues that and demonstrates how science, technology, and ideas about modernity have all influenced these activities. It highlights that when inconsistencies among different knowledges emerge, modernization can create inconsistent assemblages of modern and traditional practices and reveal the multiplicity of everyday life.
Using these examples of everyday life to portray the complexity of day-to-day existence in Tibet, this book will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Tibet, China, human geography, anthropology, and the sociology of science and technology.
By:
Su Hu
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
ISBN: 9781032590837
ISBN 10: 1032590831
Series: Routledge Contemporary China Series
Pages: 126
Publication Date: 26 December 2025
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Primary
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Forthcoming
1. Introduction 2. A Routine Life in Modernity: Storms, Maize Fields, and Insurance 3. Leviathan the Forager: Boundaries, Battles, and the Foraging Mountain 4. Intriguing Resistance and a Politics of Truth: The Hydropower Plant 5. Conclusion: Momentary Time and Modernization
Su Hu is a lecturer at the University of Science and Technology Beijing, China, focusing on modernization, Science and Technology Studies (STS), and the ontological turn.