Why Hair Needs to Be Long

Tibetan tantrists (non-monastic Buddhist practitioners of tantric rituals) attach great importance to keeping their hair long. The importance of tantrists’ hair is particularly striking in Repkong county (northeastern Tibet), which is famous for its large number of tantrists, many of whom wear dread...

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Main Author: Nicolas Sihlé
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative 2018-11-01
Series:Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/10562
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author Nicolas Sihlé
author_facet Nicolas Sihlé
author_sort Nicolas Sihlé
collection DOAJ
description Tibetan tantrists (non-monastic Buddhist practitioners of tantric rituals) attach great importance to keeping their hair long. The importance of tantrists’ hair is particularly striking in Repkong county (northeastern Tibet), which is famous for its large number of tantrists, many of whom wear dreadlocks wound around their heads. This study of the Repkong tantrists’ capillary culture will argue that their hair, at the intersection between the bodily, the social and the political, constitutes an overdetermined religious identity marker. Bromberger’s analytical approach to hair, which focuses primarily on sociological factors such as group belonging or norm vs. marginality, is relevant here, but overlooks key cultural dimensions of the phenomenon. Tibetan notions of embodied divinity and ritual power attached to hair indicate that it is important to include questions about cultural perceptions of the nature of hair and of its relationship with the individuals themselves, or with the beings that can inhabit it.
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publisher Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative
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spelling doaj-art-f98eddf6b7cc49c1bd2e1ad4e888c0492025-01-30T13:42:02ZfraLaboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie ComparativeAteliers d'Anthropologie2117-38692018-11-014510.4000/ateliers.10562Why Hair Needs to Be LongNicolas SihléTibetan tantrists (non-monastic Buddhist practitioners of tantric rituals) attach great importance to keeping their hair long. The importance of tantrists’ hair is particularly striking in Repkong county (northeastern Tibet), which is famous for its large number of tantrists, many of whom wear dreadlocks wound around their heads. This study of the Repkong tantrists’ capillary culture will argue that their hair, at the intersection between the bodily, the social and the political, constitutes an overdetermined religious identity marker. Bromberger’s analytical approach to hair, which focuses primarily on sociological factors such as group belonging or norm vs. marginality, is relevant here, but overlooks key cultural dimensions of the phenomenon. Tibetan notions of embodied divinity and ritual power attached to hair indicate that it is important to include questions about cultural perceptions of the nature of hair and of its relationship with the individuals themselves, or with the beings that can inhabit it.https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/10562Tibethairreligious identity markerritual powertantric Buddhismtantric deities
spellingShingle Nicolas Sihlé
Why Hair Needs to Be Long
Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Tibet
hair
religious identity marker
ritual power
tantric Buddhism
tantric deities
title Why Hair Needs to Be Long
title_full Why Hair Needs to Be Long
title_fullStr Why Hair Needs to Be Long
title_full_unstemmed Why Hair Needs to Be Long
title_short Why Hair Needs to Be Long
title_sort why hair needs to be long
topic Tibet
hair
religious identity marker
ritual power
tantric Buddhism
tantric deities
url https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/10562
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolassihle whyhairneedstobelong