The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Standard

The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan. / Chophel, Dendup.

2018. Abstract from Chulalongkorn Asian Heritage Forum: Culture of Longevity, Bangkok, Thailand.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Harvard

Chophel, D 2018, 'The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan', Chulalongkorn Asian Heritage Forum: Culture of Longevity, Bangkok, Thailand, 15/08/2018 - 16/08/2018. <http://www.thaistudies.chula.ac.th/book/program-book-2018-chulalongkorn-asian-heritage-forum-culture-of-longevity/>

APA

Chophel, D. (2018). The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan. Abstract from Chulalongkorn Asian Heritage Forum: Culture of Longevity, Bangkok, Thailand. http://www.thaistudies.chula.ac.th/book/program-book-2018-chulalongkorn-asian-heritage-forum-culture-of-longevity/

Vancouver

Chophel D. The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan. 2018. Abstract from Chulalongkorn Asian Heritage Forum: Culture of Longevity, Bangkok, Thailand.

Author

Chophel, Dendup. / The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan. Abstract from Chulalongkorn Asian Heritage Forum: Culture of Longevity, Bangkok, Thailand.

Bibtex

@conference{077c4d05f992434eacc0b15908c15f00,
title = "The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan",
abstract = "Preparing for a good death is the primary focus of life in Bongo village. Based on a detailed ethnographic study carried over one year for a PhD dissertation, this paper presents findings on the cyclic nature of life in this rural Bhutanese community, where as soon as a child is born, they are considered a part of the four cycles of existence leading to birth, aging, sickness and death. An ideal life is one in which people consciously follow thoughts and actions that are considered appropriate for each of these cycles. All these stages are considered inevitable, as indeed they are. Therefore, instead of fearing the consequences of birth, aging, sickness and death, approaches to a well-lived life is explored through these life stages. In the changing milieu of Bongo, this means resorting to both traditional and modern life practices. It also means overcoming challenges accruing from these two sources.This paper deals with how the people seek to align their life goals with these ideal-types, although quite often, they face issues that complicate this process. For example, the ideal-type of existence is based on an historical existence, while their life challenges are contemporary in nature. Thus, there exists a gap between the ideals and actual practices of a full life-lived well, which, however, does not detract them from the qualitative and quantitative pursuits of life.",
author = "Dendup Chophel",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
note = "Chulalongkorn Asian Heritage Forum: Culture of Longevity ; Conference date: 15-08-2018 Through 16-08-2018",
url = "http://www.thaistudies.chula.ac.th/book/program-book-2018-chulalongkorn-asian-heritage-forum-culture-of-longevity/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - The cycle of good life and well-prepared death in Bongo village of Southwest Bhutan

AU - Chophel, Dendup

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Preparing for a good death is the primary focus of life in Bongo village. Based on a detailed ethnographic study carried over one year for a PhD dissertation, this paper presents findings on the cyclic nature of life in this rural Bhutanese community, where as soon as a child is born, they are considered a part of the four cycles of existence leading to birth, aging, sickness and death. An ideal life is one in which people consciously follow thoughts and actions that are considered appropriate for each of these cycles. All these stages are considered inevitable, as indeed they are. Therefore, instead of fearing the consequences of birth, aging, sickness and death, approaches to a well-lived life is explored through these life stages. In the changing milieu of Bongo, this means resorting to both traditional and modern life practices. It also means overcoming challenges accruing from these two sources.This paper deals with how the people seek to align their life goals with these ideal-types, although quite often, they face issues that complicate this process. For example, the ideal-type of existence is based on an historical existence, while their life challenges are contemporary in nature. Thus, there exists a gap between the ideals and actual practices of a full life-lived well, which, however, does not detract them from the qualitative and quantitative pursuits of life.

AB - Preparing for a good death is the primary focus of life in Bongo village. Based on a detailed ethnographic study carried over one year for a PhD dissertation, this paper presents findings on the cyclic nature of life in this rural Bhutanese community, where as soon as a child is born, they are considered a part of the four cycles of existence leading to birth, aging, sickness and death. An ideal life is one in which people consciously follow thoughts and actions that are considered appropriate for each of these cycles. All these stages are considered inevitable, as indeed they are. Therefore, instead of fearing the consequences of birth, aging, sickness and death, approaches to a well-lived life is explored through these life stages. In the changing milieu of Bongo, this means resorting to both traditional and modern life practices. It also means overcoming challenges accruing from these two sources.This paper deals with how the people seek to align their life goals with these ideal-types, although quite often, they face issues that complicate this process. For example, the ideal-type of existence is based on an historical existence, while their life challenges are contemporary in nature. Thus, there exists a gap between the ideals and actual practices of a full life-lived well, which, however, does not detract them from the qualitative and quantitative pursuits of life.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - Chulalongkorn Asian Heritage Forum: Culture of Longevity

Y2 - 15 August 2018 through 16 August 2018

ER -

ID: 385838018