This collaborative study investigates the hill station of Kalimpong and the larger Eastern Himalayan borderlands as a paradigmatic case of a “contact zone.” In the colonial and early post-colonial era, this space enabled a variety of encounters: between (British) India, Tibet, and China, but also Nepal and Bhutan; between Christian mission and Himalayan religions; between global flows of money and information and local markets and practices. Using a plethora of local and global historical sources, the contributing essays follow the pathways of people from diverse cultural backgrounds and investigate the new forms of knowledge and practice that resulted from their encounters and their shifting power relations. The volume provides not only a nuanced historiography of Kalimpong and its adjacent areas, but also a conceptual model for studying transcultural processes in borderland spaces and their colonial and post-colonial dynamics.
Markus Viehbeck ist wissenschaftlicher Assistent für Buddhistische Studien an der Universität Heidelberg. Seine Forschung konzentriert sich auf die tibetische Geistesgeschichte, buddhistische Philosophie und die Geschichte und Religion der Grenzgebiete des Himalajas. Als Teil des Exzellenzclusters „Asien und Europa im globalen Kontext“ untersucht er die Beziehungen Tibets zu anderen kulturellen Kontexten, mit besonderem Fokus auf den östlichen Himalaja.