What Makes a Family? A Visual Approach to Ontological and Substantial Dimensions of the Domestic in Nepal

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2218/himalaya.2022.7235

Abstract

What makes a family? On the one hand, tangible aspects such as a shared household, eating practices, and marriage alliances come to mind. On the other hand, that ineffable dominium of feelings of attachment that is difficult to articulate also must have its role. I define the former a ‘substantial’ dimension, and the latter an ‘ontological’ dimension of kinship. Substantial and ontological dimensions are often profoundly intertwined in familial groups in most societies, yet in differing ways. Also, while substantial elements are not necessary for a group to identify as a family, as demonstrated by transnational family arrangements that do not share a household or eating practices, at the same time the expected exchange of substances might also follow obligations that do not correspond to one’ s personal sense of belonging. The present essay visualizes the intersubjective processes through which middle-class people conceive of the family in the Newar city of Bhaktapur (Nepal), through the negotiation of domestic spaces and practices. Drawing upon fifteen months of ethnographic research in 2018-2019, I show how ontological and substantial dimensions come together to shape modern ideas of family. 

Author Biography

  • Paola Tine, The University of Adelaide

    Paola Tine is a PhD candidate in Social Anthropology at the University of Adelaide (South Australia). After her studies in the Arts & Humanities (2013, BA Human Sciences with a major in Cultural Anthropology, University of Siena), she specialised in Visual Anthropology (2015, MA University of Siena) and in Documentary ethnographic video-making (2017, ETNOfilm, Padova). She has conducted intensive fieldwork in South Australia and Nepal, where she used traditional qualitative research methods and experimental visual methodologies, including painting. In 2018, she received the 'Jon Prosser Award for Outstanding Work by Beginning Scholars in Visual Methodologies' by the International Visual Sociology Association.

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Published

17-Dec-2022

Issue

Section

Photo Essays

How to Cite

What Makes a Family? A Visual Approach to Ontological and Substantial Dimensions of the Domestic in Nepal. (2022). HIMALAYA - The Journal of the Association for Nepal and Himalayan Studies, 41(2), 127-143. https://doi.org/10.2218/himalaya.2022.7235