essay

Recruitment to monasticism among the Sherpas

personality and the cultural construction of society: papers in honor of melford e. spiroTuscaloosa • Published In 1990 • Pages: 254-274, 359-392

By: Paul, Robert A..

Abstract
In this paper, Paul uses a Freudian generative model of psyche and culture, one expounded in his book 'The Tibetan Symbolic World' (1982), to explain the recruitment pattern of Sherpa monks. According to Paul the transition between junior and senior males is fraught with anxiety. Without the early development of a strong ego, this transition is often aborted. According to his survey, many monks came from homes in which either the father or mother had died or left home. He argues that without the presence of mature adult in the home to support the full development of a child's ego, the child is unable to make the transition to a sexually mature adult during adolescence and instead opts out for a life of celibacy and monkhood.
Subjects
Information sources listed in other works
Personality development
Shamans and psychotherapists
Eschatology
Magicians and diviners
Prophets and ascetics
Ethnopsychology
culture
Sherpa
HRAF PubDate
2004
Region
Asia
Sub Region
Central Asia
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 2002
Field Date
not specified
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Solu-Khumba region, Nepal
Notes
Robert A. Paul
Includes bibliographical references (p. 359-389)
LCCN
89032993
LCSH
Sherpa (Nepalese people)