An Appropriate Sacrifice? Perfections of Generosity and the Politics of Elders Charity in Sri Lanka's Gerontological Turn

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dc.contributor.author Widger, Tom
dc.contributor.author Kabir, Sarah
dc.date.accessioned 2016-07-11T06:04:03Z
dc.date.available 2016-07-11T06:04:03Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.identifier.citation Faculty of Arts International Research Conference - December, 2015 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://archive.cmb.ac.lk:8080/xmlui/handle/70130/4413
dc.description.abstract Anthropological research into individual and ,societal experiences of ageing has developed along two broad lines. The first has been an effort to challenge the idea that human beings age in biologically and socially similar ways regardless of cultural context, while the second has been to explore the moral and political implications and ambivalences of changing elder care arrangements, especially as they pertain to relationships between the family, state, and market. This paper draws from ethnographic fieldwork conducted in a charitable elders' home in Colombo, Sri Lanka, to describe the effects of an ageing population on popular Buddhist giving practices, and the effects of those practices on the ways in which the elderly population is being imagined. The material shows how elders' homes, amidst some controversy, are increasingly being seen as appropriate places for the gifting of matakaddna, leading to the fusion of charitable and sacrificial traditions of ddna and innovations in ritual practice. We argue that the relationship that exists between elders' homes and ddna is illustrative of an emerging thanatopolitics attributable to the challenges presented by a growing population of the dependent elderly. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Colombo en_US
dc.subject Ageing population, Buddhism, Charity, Politics en_US
dc.title An Appropriate Sacrifice? Perfections of Generosity and the Politics of Elders Charity in Sri Lanka's Gerontological Turn en_US
dc.type Research abstract en_US


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