Poetic transformations of yolmo ?sadness?
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
- Vol. 15 (4) , 387-420
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00051326
Abstract
One way in which Yolmo Sherpa of Helambu, Nepal, come to terms with loss is to sing of it. The paper seeks to show how one Yolmo ‘song of sadness’ works to express, evoke and assuage sentiments of funerary grief. Yet to best explore the transformative poetics of the song, we must trace its semantic links to other songs and situations, and so develop a contextual understanding of the experiential contours of Yolmo ‘sadness,’ the local ethos of emotional avoidance and restraint, and the sociopolitical nature of emotional distress in the Helambu valley. The findings of this analysis lead the author to argue, in contrast with recent ethnographies which treat discourses on emotions as rhetorical strategies rather than as reflections of personal or communal experience, that we need an integrative approach which focuses on the relationship between language and experience, politics and felt emotion.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sadness, depression and social reciprocity in highland EcuadorSocial Science & Medicine, 1989
- managing the heart to brighten face and soul: emotions in Balinese morality and health careAmerican Ethnologist, 1989
- Concepts of the person among the Gurungs of NepalAmerican Ethnologist, 1989
- notions of grief and catharsis among the TorajaAmerican Ethnologist, 1988
- Ritual Wailing in Amerindian BrazilAmerican Anthropologist, 1988
- spirits and voices in Tamil songsAmerican Ethnologist, 1988
- The cognitive model of anger inherent in American EnglishPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1987
- A folk model of the mindPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1987
- The Anthropology of EmotionsAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1986
- Human Emotions: Universal or Culture‐Specific?American Anthropologist, 1986