Tibetan Memoies

Tibetan Memoies
Stories from Exile and Dreams Deferred
Vorbestellbar | Lieferzeit: Vorbestellbar - Erscheint laut Verlag im/am 15.11.2024. I

Erstverkaufstag: 15.11.2024

45,50 €*

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Artikel-Nr:
9781960521064
Veröffentl:
2024
Erscheinungsdatum:
15.11.2024
Seiten:
160
Autor:
Eugene H Johnson
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Dr. Eugene H. Johnson has been Professor of Comparative Medicine at Sultan Qaboos University in Oman since 1999. Previously he worked as a National Institutes of Health Clinical Research Scientist at the Yale University Medical School. He has mentored numerous students, and research scientists from many parts of the world and authored over one hundred and fifty peer-reviewed scientific articles. A passionate photographer since 1974, he is the author of four books: A Photographic Pilgrimage, Something's Fishy, (Unspoken Dialogues, 2004), and a two-volume series commissioned by the late Sultan Qaboos bin Said of Oman, titled Reflections from the Not So Distant Past in Oman. His work has been featured in magazines including Black and White Photography, Food and Travel, and Lenswork, and in the book, Looking at Images, by Brooks Jensen, the longtime editor of Lenswork (Lenswork Publshing 2014). His work is held in numerous private and public collections including Al-Bustan Palace, Oman, Banco do Brasil, Brazil, Brazilian American Cultural Institute, Washington, D.C., the Museum of Art in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Nairobi National Museum, Kenya,, and the Royal Court of the Sultanate of Oman, and has been showcased in Brazil, Germany, India, Kenya, and Kazakhstan. The United States Embassy in the Sultanate of Oman hosted a thirty-year retrospective of his works that was co-sponsored by 17 international corporations.
This is the first book to present the stories and portraits of ordinary Tibetan women and men in exile, in their own words. It includes gorgeous photographs of the lands they embraced in Ladakh, where they fled after the Chinese annexed Tibet in 1959.To meet the people and make these photographs, the Johnsons traveled throughout Ladakh, visiting many villages, and interviewing dozens of people. Most of them had to leave everything behind when they fled: family, friends, and their most precious possessions: their animals, with whom they had a unique and symbiotic relationship.Yet, as Dr. Johnson reveals in his photographs and stories, these refugees are resilient, wise, and hopeful. They have made their tragedy a source of strength, along with their unwavering devotion to their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and to their Buddhist practice, which continues to sustain them.In a world full of exiles, more than 150,000 of which are Tibetan, this book is not only of historical significance, it is timely. It puts a human face on the increasingly complex problem of people being forcibly displaced from their homelands. These remarkable individuals show us the meaning of never giving up, and that everyone deserves compassion, for without it, the future of humanity stands in peril.

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