| Mesocosm |
| PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
| Chapter One Introduction |
| • | The Background of This Study |
| • | How The Study Was Done |
| PART ONE ORIENTATIONS AND CONTEXTS |
| Chapter Two Orientations |
| • | Bhaktapur and the Newars |
| Ways of Looking at the Organization of Bhaktapur |
| • | Ballet |
| • | Typological Conceits: The Archaic City |
| • | Historical Conceits: The Ancient Indo-European City and the Axial Age |
| • | Typological Conceits: Kinds Of Minds—A Continent in the Great Divide |
| • | Organizational Conceits: The Civic Function of Symbolism in Bhaktapur and, Presumably, in Other Such Archaic Cities |
| • | Organizational Conceits: Embedded And Marked Symbolism |
| • | Typological Conceits: Hinduism As An Archaic Kind of Symbol System And Bhaktapur As A Hindu Climax Community |
| • | Psychological Conceits: What Is A Newar That He or She May Know Bhaktapur |
| Chapter Three Nepal, the Kathmandu Valley, and Some History |
| • | Introduction |
| • | Nepal |
| • | The Kathmandu Valley |
| • | Notes On Early Newar History |
| • | Bhaktapur's Beginnings |
| • | Jayasthiti Malla and the Ordering of Bhaktapur |
| • | From Jayasthiti Malla to the Fall of the Newar Polity |
| • | The Gorkhali State, And the Submerging of the Newars in Greater Nepal |
| • | The 1950 Revolution Against The Rana Regime |
| Chapter Four Bhaktapur's Other Order |
| • | Introduction |
| • | The Physical City |
| • | Some Demographic Notes |
| • | Population Density |
| • | Bhaktapur's Demography: Newars And Hindu Newars |
| • | The Hinterland |
| • | Relation To The Central Government |
| • | The Agricultural Economy |
| • | The Nonagricultural Economy |
| • | A Summary Note |
| Chapter Five The Distribution of Roles: The Macrostatus System |
| • | Introduction: Thar And Macrostatus Levels |
| • | The Thar |
| • | An Excursion. Caste, Class, And Varna |
| • | Who In Bhaktapur Is A Newar? |
| • | The Macrostatus Levels: Newar Hindus, The Core System |
| • | The Macrostatus System: Buddhist Thars and Some Notes on Newar Buddhism |
| • | Non-Newars: Brahmans |
| • | Non-Newars: Matha Priests |
| • | Non-Newars: Others |
| • | Thar, Macrostatus, and the Organization of Occupational and Ritual Roles |
| • | Thar And Macrostatus Demography |
| • | Entailments and Markers of the Macrostatus Levels |
| Status Ranking of and by Outsiders |
| • | 1. Groups within Bhaktapur: Buddhist Bare. |
| • | 2. Groups within Bhaktapur: non-Newar Brahmans and Matha priests. |
| • | 3. Relations to other non-Newar Nepalis, both in and out of Bhaktapur. |
| • | 4. Partyas' conceptions of Newars. |
| • | Envoi |
| Chapter Six Inside the Thars |
| • | Introduction: The Internal Structure of the Thar |
| • | Household and Household Size |
| • | Household Roles |
| • | Wives and Households |
| • | Household Hierarchy, Authority, and Purity and the Cipa System |
| The Comparative Freedom of the Newar Woman in the Northern Hindu Context |
| • | Newar Menstrual Disabilities in Comparison with the Indo-Nepalese |
| • | A Wife's Natal Household's Relation to Her Children: The Mother's Brother |
| • | Marriage |
| • | Remarriage And Multiple Marriage |
| • | The Lack of Hypergamic Implications of Marriage |
| • | Adoption and Marriage |
| • | Major Kin Groupings: (I) Kul, Phuki and Their Women |
| • | Major Kin Groupings: (II) Feminal Kin, Tha:Thiti |
| • | Phuki and Thar |
| • | Ritual Friendship and Fictive Kinship |
| • | Kinship Terminology |
| • | Guthis, Organizations for Special Purposes |
| • | The Inside of the Thars in Relation to the City's Mesocosm |
| PART TWO THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE MESOCOSM |
| Chapter Seven The Symbolic Organization of Space |
| • | Introduction |
| • | The City As An Icon of A God |
| • | A Note on Hill and River |
| • | The Idealization of Space: Bhaktapur As A Yantra |
| The City Boundaries and the Bordering Outside |
| • | City Boundaries: The Boundary-Protecting Goddesses |
| • | City Boundaries: The External Seat of the Lineage God, The Digu God |
| • | City Boundaries: Cremation, Dying, And Purification |
| • | City Boundaries: The Untouchables' Proper Place |
| • | On Boundaries |
| • | Bhaktapur As A Mandala : The Nine Mandalic Section |
| • | City Halves: Ritually Organized Antagonism |
| • | Status and Space: Concentric Circles |
| • | The Village in the City, The Twa: |
| • | Some Notes on the Symbolic Construction of the House |
| • | Collapsed Structure Inside the City: Crossroads |
| • | The Undercity |
| • | Symbolized Space Beyond the City |
| • | Integration of Spaces |
| Chapter Eight Bhaktapur's Pantheon |
| • | Introduction |
| • | Approaches |
| Divinities: Housing and Setting |
| • | 1. Temples, dega:s. |
| • | 2. God-houses, dya: che(n)s. |
| • | 3. Shrines. |
| • | 4. Non-Newar Hindu structures. |
| • | Gods With Temples and Shrines—Some Numbers |
| Sorting Supernaturals—Some Preliminary Remarks |
| • | 1. "Major city gods." |
| • | 2. "Stone gods." |
| • | 3. "Astral divinities." |
| • | 4. "Ghosts and spirits." |
| Major Gods: The "Ordinary" Deities |
| Siva |
| • | 1. Siva as the creative principle. |
| • | 2. Siva, first among the gods. |
| • | 3. Siva as the generator of the dangerous gods. |
| • | 4. Siva as one of the group of ordinary gods. |
| • | Visnu-Narayana And His Avatars |
| • | Ganesa |
| • | A Note on Yama |
| • | The Ordinary Female Divinities: Laksmi, Sarasvati, And Parvati |
| • | The Transition to the Dangerous Divinities |
| Major Gods: The "Dangerous" Deities |
| • | The Dangerous Goddess and Her Transformations |
| • | The Mandalic Goddesses |
| • | The Nine Durgas |
| • | Taleju, Bhaktapur's Political Goddess |
| • | Bhagavati |
| • | Miscellaneous Dangerous Goddesses |
| • | Dangerous Goddesses: Some Principles of Classification |
| • | Dangerous Male Gods |
| • | Bhisi(n) (Bhima) |
| • | Nasa Dya: (Nrtya Natha) |
| • | Bhaila Dya: (Bhairava) |
| Natural Stones As Divinities |
| • | Pithas |
| • | The Digu God, Lineage Gods |
| • | Protectors of Local Space, Chetrapal and Pikha Lakhu |
| • | Mediators to the Underground—Disposers of Pollution |
| • | Astral Deities |
| • | The Brahmans' Vedic Gods |
| • | Pilgrimage Gods of the Royal Center |
| • | Household Gods |
| • | Ghosts and Spirits |
| • | Nagas |
| Bhaktapur's Pantheon As A System of Signs |
| • | Bhaktapur's Pantheon As A System of Signs: Some Notes on Idols |
| Bhaktapur's Pantheon As A System of Signs: Classes of Meaningful Forms |
| • | 1. Proximity. |
| • | 2. Materiality. |
| • | 3. Artifice. |
| • | 4. Ordinary versus uncanny humanly worked forms. |
| • | 1. Proximate versus distant. |
| • | 2. Material versus immaterial. |
| • | 3. Worked versus natural. |
| • | 4. Benign versus dangerous. |
| • | Bhaktapur's Pantheon As A System of Signs: Distinctions Within this. Types of Gods |
| • | Bhaktapur's Pantheon As A System of Signs: Some Contrasts With Other Hindu Systems |
| • | A Final Remark |
| Chapter Nine Tantrism and the Worship of the Dangerous Deities |
| • | Introduction |
| • | Tantrism As A Religious Mode |
| • | Tantrism In Popular Fantasy |
| • | Upper-Status Tantrism |
| • | Upper-Status Tantrism: Puja |
| • | Upper-Status Tantrism: Family And Phuki Worship—Worship oF the Lineage Gods, The Aga(n) Gods, And the Digu Gods |
| • | Upper-Status Tantrism: Individually Centered Practices and Initiation |
| Tantrism and the Public City |
| • | Symbolic Complexes: Siva/Sakti |
| Symbolic Complexes: Sacrifice |
| • | Sacrifice: The Hierarchical Division of the Head |
| • | Sacrifice: Human Sacrifice |
| • | Sacrifice: Aspects of Its Significance in Bhaktapur |
| • | Secrecy and Mystery |
| • | In Sum |
| Chapter Ten Priests |
| • | Preliminaries: Priests and Kings—The Relations of the Symbolic Order and Power |
| • | Preliminaries: Kinds of Priests and Priestly Functions |
| Bhaktapur's Brahmans |
| • | The Rajopadhyaya Brahmans |
| • | Lakhae Brahmans |
| • | Bhaktapur's Non-Newar Brahmans |
| Overt Auxiliary Priests and Para-Priests |
| • | Josi |
| • | Acajus |
| • | Tini |
| Purity Technicians With Limited Functions |
| • | The Bha |
| • | The Cala(n) |
| • | The Kata: |
| • | The Nau |
| • | Hindu Use of Buddhist Priests |
| • | Covert Para-Priests: The Pollution-Accumulating Thars—Po(n) and Jugi |
| • | Temple and Shrine Priests |
| • | Some Remarks on the Status Of The Rajopadhyaya Brahman In Bhaktapur |
| Chapter Eleven Purity and Impurity: On the Borders of the Sacred |
| • | Introduction |
| • | A Tangle of Interpretations |
| • | What Is Polluted, And What Is Polluting? |
| • | Pollution, Ingestion, And Disgust |
| • | Bodies and Corporate Bodies and Their Exuviae |
| • | What Is Polluted and Polluting in Birth and Death? |
| The Management of Pollution in Bhaktapur: Avoidance, Surrogation, and Cleaning |
| • | Surrogate Absorption of Contaminants—Both Dirty and Clean |
| • | Purification |
| • | The Purity Complex: Psychological Resonances and Social Order |
| PART THREE THE DANCE OF SYMBOLS |
| Chapter Twelve The Civic Ballet: Annual Time and the Festival Cycles |
| • | Introduction |
| • | The Calendar |
| Approaches to Meaning |
| • | Cycles |
| • | Selection from the Hindu Set of Festivals |
| • | Aspects of the Analysis of Calendrical Events |
| • | The Inclusion and Sequential Numbering of Calendrically Determined Events |
| Chapter Thirteen The Events of the Lunar Year |
| • | Introduction |
| • | Swanti and the Lunar New Year [77, 78, 79, 1, 2] |
| Miscellaneous Events [3-7] |
| • | Jugari Na:Mi [3] |
| • | Hari Bodhini [4] |
| • | Saki Mana Punhi [5] |
| • | Gopinatha Jatra [6] |
| • | Bala, Ca:Re [7] |
| • | Sukhu(n) Bhisi(n)dya: Jatra [8] |
| • | Ya: Marhi Punhi [9] |
| • | Miscellaneous Events [10-11] |
| • | The Month of the Swasthani Vrata |
| • | Sarasvati Festivals [12, 13] |
| • | Madya: Jatra [14] End of Swasthani Vrata |
| • | Sila Ca:re (Sivaratri) [15] |
| • | The Minor Festivals of Krsna (Holi) [16, 17] |
| • | The Approach of the Season of Anxiety [18, 19] |
| • | Biska:, The Solar New Year [20-29] |
| • | The Dewali Period, the Worship of the Digu Lineage Deities [30] |
| • | The Minor Dasai(n) of Rama [31, 32] |
| • | Honoring Mothers [33] |
| • | Aksaya Trtiya [34] |
| • | Candesvari Jatra [35] |
| • | Buddha Jaya(n)ti and a Note on "Buddhist" Festivals in Bhaktapur |
| • | Sithi Nakha [36] |
| • | Candi Bhagavati Jatra [37] |
| • | Dasa Hara [38] |
| • | Panauti Jatra [39] |
| • | Bhagasti [40], the Death of the nine Durgas (Devi Cycle) |
| • | Minor Festivals of Visnu [41-43] and the Beginning of the Caturmasa Vrata |
| • | Guru Puja [44] |
| • | Gatha Muga: Ca:re [45] (Devi Cycle) |
| • | Naga Pa(n)cami [46] |
| • | Gunhi Punhi [47], Beginning of the Densest Festival Season |
| • | Saparu [48], the Cow Festivalof the Dead of the Previous Year, and the Annual Carnival |
| • | Miscellaneous Events: Krsna Janmastami [49] and Sitala Puja [50] |
| • | Gokarna Au(n)si [51], Honoring Fathers |
| • | Miscellaneous Minor Events [52-58]: a Note on Tij, a Festival Which the Newars do not Have |
| • | Events During the Period of Indra Jatra [59-65]: the Transformation of Festival Themes and Events in Different Newar Cities and Towns |
| • | The Remainder of the Yearly Calendrical Cycle [66-79] |
| Chapter Fourteen The Events of the Solar Cycle |
| • | Introduction |
| • | Ghya: Caku Sa(n)lhu [10] |
| Biska: [20-29]: The Solar New Year Festival |
| The Preliminary Preparations |
| • | 1. The yasi(n). |
| • | 2. Bhairava and Bhadrakali . |
| • | 3. The representation of Royalty. |
| • | The First Day Start of the Bhairava/Bhadrakali Jatra [20]; The Struggle Between the Upper and Lower Halves of the City |
| • | The Second Day |
| • | The Third Day |
| The Fourth Day |
| • | Preliminaries |
| • | The Raising Up of the Main Yasi(n) God—The Ending of the Old Year |
| • | The Fifth Day: Taking Down the Yasi(n) God—Beginning of the Solar New Year |
| • | The Sixth Day: The Mahakali/Mahalaksmi Jatra |
| • | The Seventh Day: The Brahmani/Mahesvari Jatra |
| • | The Eighth Day. Feasting the Gods—Chuma(n) Gandya: Jatra |
| • | The Ninth Day: Taking Down the Small Yasi(n) God—Final Phases of the Bhairava/Bhadrakali Jatra |
| Approaches to Meaning |
| • | 1. Biska: as a solar festival. |
| • | 2. Biska: as a structural focal sequence. |
| • | 3. Interactive versus parallel features: bases for solidarity. |
| • | 4. Human actors. |
| • | 5. Divine actors. |
| • | 6. Space. |
| • | 7. Narrative content. |
| • | 8. Rhetoric. |
| • | 9. The message. |
| Chapter Fifteen The Devi Cycle |
| • | Introduction |
| • | The Legend of the Nine Durgas |
| • | An Introduction to Meaning |
| • | The Nine Durgas—The Cast of Characters and Their Iconic Representation |
| The Annual Cycle |
| • | Sithi Nakha [36] |
| • | Bhagasti [40] |
| • | The Period Between Bhagasti [40] and Gatha Muga: Ca:Re [45], Human Sacrifice |
| • | Gatha Muga: Ca:Re [45] |
| Mohani, The Autumnal Festival Sequence of the Rice Harvest [67-76] |
| • | Mohani: The First Day |
| • | The Second Day through the Sixth Day |
| • | The Seventh Day: Taking Down the Goddess Taleju |
| • | The Eighth Day: Kalaratri |
| • | Continuation of the Ninth Day: The Living Goddess Kumari and Emergence of the Nine Durgas |
| • | The Tenth Day: The Taleju Jatra, and the Transfer of Power to the Nine Durgas |
| Mohani: Approaches to Meaning |
| • | 1. Mohani and the rice agricultural cycle. |
| • | 2. Mohani as a structural focal sequence. |
| • | 3. Interactive versus parallel features. |
| • | 4. Human actors. |
| • | 5. Divine actors. |
| • | 6. Space. |
| • | 7. The narrative. |
| • | 8.Rhetoric and participation. |
| • | The Performances of the Nine Durgas |
| • | The Significance of the Nine Durgas" Pyakha(n): Some Speculations on How The Nine Durgas Protect Bhaktapur |
| Chapter Sixteen The Patterns and Meanings of the Festival Year |
| • | Introduction |
| • | Distinctions and Enumerations and Their Implications |
| • | A Note on Moving Deities Within the City |
| • | Patterns in the Year |
| • | External Influences on the Annual Cycle |
| • | A View of the Annual Events With the Citizen at Their Center |
| Chapter Seventeen What Is Bhaktapur that a Newar May Know It? |
| • | Structures of the Imagination |
| • | Spheres, Structures, and Oppositions |
| Resources for Making Meaning Intelligible |
| • | 1. Levels. |
| • | 2. Redundancy and filtering. |
| • | 3. Discrete categories. |
| • | 4. Membership in a domain. |
| • | 5. Boundaries. |
| • | 6. Systematic ordering. |
| • | Bhaktapur's Order, Stability, And Stasis |
| • | Why Is Bhaktapur the Way It Is? |
| Appendix One Transliterations Used in the Text |
| • | Transliteration of Bhaktapur Newari |
| Appendix Two Bhaktapur's Newar Hindu Thars Ranked By Macrosocial Status |
| • | Part 1. Thars Listed By Status Levels |
| • | Part 2. Newar Hindu Thars In Bhaktapur Listed Alphabetically |
| Appendix Three Kinship Terminology |
| Appendix Four Types of Worship and Materials Used in Worship |
| Pujas Not Conducted By A Brahman Purohita |
| • | Temple Visits |
| • | Home Pujas |
| • | Pujas Conducted By A Brahman Purohita |
| Materials and Equipment |
| • | Pure Water |
| • | Pigments |
| • | Rice |
| • | Samhae |
| • | Swaga(n) |
| Appendix Five A Catalogue of Annual Events and Their Distribution Throughout the Lunar Year |
| Appendix Six Rites of Passage and Death Ceremonies |
| • | 1. Writing a mantra on the tongue: Jihvasodhana. |
| • | 2. Application of lamp black to the child's eyes by the father's sister. |
| • | 3. Name giving: Namakarana. |
| • | 4. The rice feeding ceremony: Ja(n)ko. |
| • | 5. Boy's hair shaving: Busakha. |
| • | 6. Boy's full membership in their thar: Kaeta Puja. |
| • | 7. Mock-marriage: Ihi. |
| • | 8. Menarche ceremonies: Barha taegu and Barha cwa(n)gu. |
| • | 9. Marriage: Byaha. |
| • | 10. Tantric initiation: Dekha. |
| • | 11. Old-age ceremonies: Buraburi ja(n)ko. |
| • | 12. Dying and cremation. |
| • | Dying. |
| • | Preparation of the body. |
| • | The funeral procession. |
| • | The cremation. |
| • | The return to the house. |
| • | The activities of the mourning period. |
| • | Death related activities following the dasa kriya mourning period. |
| Notes |
| • | Chapter One Introduction |
| • | Chapter Two Orientations |
| • | Chapter Three Nepal, the Kathmandu Valley, and Some History |
| • | Chapter Four Bhaktapur's Other Order |
| • | Chapter Five The Distribution of Roles: The Macrostatus System |
| • | Chapter Six Inside the Thars |
| • | Chapter Seven The Symbolic Organization of Space |
| • | Chapter Eight Bhaktapur's Pantheon |
| • | Chapter Nine Tantrism and the Worship of the Dangerous Deities |
| • | Chapter Ten Priests |
| • | Chapter Eleven Purity and Impurity: On the Borders of the Sacred |
| • | Chapter Twelve The Civic Ballet: Annual Time and the Festival Cycles |
| • | Chapter Thirteen The Events of the Lunar Year |
| • | Chapter Fourteen The Events of the Solar Cycle |
| • | Chapter Fifteen The Devi Cycle |
| • | Chapter Sixteen The Patterns and Meanings of the Festival Year |
| • | Chapter Seventeen What Is Bhaktapur that a Newar May Know It?1 |
| • | Appendix Two Bhaktapur's Newar Hindu Thars Ranked By Macrosocial Status |
| • | Appendix Three Kinship Terminology |
| • | Appendix Four Types of Worship and Materials Used in Worship |
| • | Appendix Six Rites of Passage and Death Ceremonies |
| GLOSSARY |
| REFERENCES |
| GENERAL INDEX |
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| NAMES INDEX |
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