Mongolian Cosmopolitical Heritage: Tracing Divergent Healing Practices Across the Mongolian-Chinese Border

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: Social Anthropology

Abstract

Recent years have witnessed a growing world-wide interest in the role of the arts and cultural heritage in cultivating health and wellbeing. In the UK, for instance, the All Party Parliamentary Group for the Arts, Health and Wellbeing published a comprehensive report in July 2017 on the lifetime benefits of arts in health, making key recommendations to political leaders and healthcare professionals. In international discourse, Tibetan medicinal bathing, an aspect of Tibetan Medicine (or Sowa Rigpa), has been entangled in a geopolitical rivalry between China and India, as the former applied to UNESCO in 2016 to register medicinal bathing as part of the nation's intangible cultural heritage, while India has sought to register the entire Sowa Rigpa tradition.

This project seeks to ethnographically explore the politics of linking health and cultural heritage. More specifically, it aims to understand how the politics of culture affect health-related practices by asking: In what ways do geopolitical forces and national constructions of culture shape practices that influence health and wellbeing?

Mongolia and China's Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region (IMAR) represent an ideal comparative case study to explore the impact of political, economic and historical forces on the shaping of healing practices. In each of these areas, disparate 20th and 21st century contexts influenced divergent re-appropriations of a common Mongolian cosmological heritage. This project will explore how shamanism and other 'alternative' healing practices, are cast as, and have come to be seen as, legitimate by practitioners, patients and the state. It offers the term 'cosmopolitical' to refer to the political principles of odering along which worlds are imagined and engaged.

The project will explore the ways in which people navigate the multiple authorities on health and wellbeing that have become increasingly popular following the dismantling of state healthcare systems in both contexts, during a time typified by increasing difficulty in assessing medical treatment and widespread mistrust in medical professionals (see Turk 2018).

The research will revolve around integrated, comparative analysis of healing practices at two key field sites within the Mongolian cultural region, selected for their divergent politico-economic contexts that impact healing practices: Tongliao municipality in China's IMAR and Mongolia, with a focus on Ulaanbaatar. The localized nuances in healing practices and everyday perceptions of them require sustained, long-term research afforded by ethnography. Fieldwork will include participant observation, semi-structured interview and patient/client survey, targeting patients, practitioners, healing techniques and inter-organizational and institutional relations among practitioner groups, clinics, and governmental institutions such as the Ministry of Public Health and local cadres. Photographic and film documentation will focus on healing techniques with a comparative aim set in historical context.

Museums will provide crucial resources and insights for this project, especially given their increased mobilization in the fostering of health and wellbeing in the UK and elsewhere. Cambridge's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology will provide an important resource to trace the role of national context in divergent re-appropriations of healing practices, as their collections predate the foundation of the modern Mongolian and Chinese nation-states. A publicly-available database of film and photography will be created from which to compare healing techniques set in historical context from resources from the MAA, and key museums and archives in Mongolia and Tongliao, IMAR.

Planned Impact

The role of the arts and cultural heritage in cultivating health and wellbeing has gained increasing purchase in general consciousness world-wide in recent years. In the UK, for example, wellbeing has been declared a national priority and increasingly considered in health policy. A National Alliance and All Party Parliamentary Group have been formulated to advocate for the arts as especially effective and cost efficient in healthcare. Increasingly, the arts and cultural heritage associated with museums have been recruited in this shift in public health discourse, as approximately 600 of the 2,500 museums and galleries in the UK were reported to have programmes that target health and wellbeing in 2017 (AAPG 2017). Given the recent importance afforded to museums in arts-focused health programmes, this research is both timely and ideally situated to engage multiple publics.

Knowledge exchange among academics, policy-makers, practitioners of Complimentary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) and wider public circles is fundamental to the type of conceptual change this project seeks to enact: namely, that cultural heritage is not something that sits static in a museum ever attached to 'a people', but that it is deeply embedded in and takes on localized meaning from the political economy and aspects of public culture.

Professional CAM practitioners and third sector organizations that promote the therapeutic effects of the arts and cultural heritage represent crucial communities to engage in understanding how the healing arts are deployed in everyday life. Engaging these communities will also help elucidate the ways in which healing practices engender meaning locally and how they come to be considered legitimate.

In our project, these communities will especially be engaged through the Project Advisory Group (PAG) and the Cultural Heritage and Wellbeing Workshop (see Events A & B in 'Pathways to Impact' document). The PAG will be comprised of approximately 10 members from the following non-academic communities: local practitioners of CAM (e.g. practitioners of Traditional Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine); stakeholders that engage the therapeutic aspects of the arts, such as Arts & Minds Cambridgeshire, The National Alliance for Arts, Health & Wellbeing's East Anglia regional organization, Arts and Health East; and related policy-makers, such as key members of the All Party Parliamentary Group for the Arts, Health and Wellbeing (APPGAHW). The PAG will work in close consultation with the research team throughout the lifespan of the project, making important contributions at the Initial Workshop and Cultural Heritage and Wellbeing Workshop (see 'Pathways to Impact' for more detail).

Another crucial community with which to engage will be museum stakeholders such as visitors and exhibition curators. This engagement will take place in few different ways. First, the project will make tangible artifacts widely accessible by categorizing and digitizing the Mongolian and Inner Mongolian Collections at Cambridge's Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology (MAA). This will allow historical images from the Lindgren Collections depicting health- and wellbeing- related practices to be available in Mongolia for the first time, raising awareness of important aspects of a shared Mongolian cultural region. The project includes the role of ongoing consultation with local Mongolian communities and a visiting scholar from Mongolia in the process of incorporating Mongolians' conceptions of cultural heritage into the knowledge base at the MAA. Additionally, the project involves capacity building for third sector professionals such as museum curators, organizations such as Arts & Minds Cambridgeshire, and professionals at the National Museum of Mongolia and Horchin Museum in Tongliao, IMAR.
 
Title 'Nine Black Ingredients' Pill: COVID-19 Prophylactic in Mongolia 
Description Part of Wolfson College, Cambridge 'Kill or Cure' Art Exhibition, running from June to September 2022. Title of Work: The 'Nine Black Ingredients' Pill: COVID-19 Prophylactic in Mongolia Medium of Work: Organic materials derived from plant and animal, fabric, wood, glass Dimensions of Work: 21.5 x 21.5 cm Description of work Centuries of Buddhist historical influences across the Inner Asia region has led to the practice of wearing precious pills as one way amongst many to prevent illness. 
Type Of Art Artwork 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Not known 
URL https://www.miasu.socanth.cam.ac.uk/projects/mongolian-cosmopolitical-heritage-tracing-divergent-hea...
 
Description Given onset of the global COVID-19 pandemic near project start date, our research focus pivoted to accommodate traditional and 'alternative' medical approaches to prevention and treatment of SARS CoV-2. One year into the project, there are preliminary findings to report on this front. We have found the concept of 'Mongolian heritage' relevant to discourses around preventing and treating SARS CoV-2, but differently mobilized across the Mongolian-Chinese border. Whereas in both contexts, locally sourced foodstuffs such as certain kinds of meat and dairy products considered traditionally Mongolian in public discourse circulate as preventative and curative in online discussion, traditional Mongolian medicine (TMM) has been applied differently. In China, Mongolian medicine as one variant of 'Nationality Medicine' (minzu yiyao ????) has been celebrated as successful in combating COVID-19, as several medicinal formulae were approved by health authorities in Inner Mongolia and administered from the earliest days of the pandemic. In Mongolia, components of traditional Chinese medical SARS CoV-2 treatments that grow within the nation's borders have been rebranded as traditional Mongolian medicine and administered alongside biomedical treatments in a select few Ulaanbaatar-based hospitals, a practice that began over a year after pandemic onset.
Exploitation Route Our research team intends to build on these initial findings throughout the lifespan of the project and beyond. Other academic audiences may find the 'cosmopolitical heritage' analytic useful in considering historically-situated cultural forms and 'traditional' practices.
Sectors Healthcare,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description A talk by Dr Ujeed to the Humanities Collaboratory Project in University of Michigan 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact At talk at the University of Michigan to members of the Collaboratory project: Centering the Northern Realms: Integrating Histories and Archaeologies of the Mongol Empire
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Attendance at academic conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact PDRA Turk attended a conference hosted by Princeton University's Department of History entitled, 'AAHM - Pandemic, Creating a Usable Past: Epidemic History, COVID-19, and the Future of Health', 8-9 May 2020. Session 2 - 'Epidemics and Urban Centers: Different Cities, Disparate Experiences' and Session 4 - 'Epidemic Responses: Civil Liberties and Public Health Politics' were particularly helpful in considering this grant's COVID-19 focus.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://history.princeton.edu/news-events/events/aahm-pandemic-creating-usable-past-epidemic-history...
 
Description Ethnography talk by Dr Turk 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact The aim of this activity was to provide students with an understanding of what ethnography in education looks like. The approach taking in the pathways project was used to exemplify and illustrate how this. The data and methods of the pathways project helped the students to understand how ethnographies can be used in education. Students were particularly interested in the walk and talk approach we use
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Feature article in Online Publication 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Elizabeth Turk and her work on the project I was featured in the Women of Wolfson online publication for Women's Month (last march): https://www.wolfson.cam.ac.uk/about/news/women-wolfson-dr-elizabeth-turk.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.wolfson.cam.ac.uk/about/news/women-wolfson-dr-elizabeth-turk.
 
Description Module for post-graduate students by E Turk 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact The module used theory on place-based education to encourage teachers to think about ways to engage children with curriculum materials by making them relevant and relatable to their daily experiences. Teachers developed programmes of learning based on the modules which they aimed to put into practice in the year following the module completion. Teachers reported many positive benefits from these activities, including significant changes to curriculum design in their own settings.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Podcast in Mongolian language for 'Bodicast' 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact A podcast https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCvRrnL7ZUc
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Presentation at conference of International Association of Tibetan Studies in Prague 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact Talk entitled:

'The People's Duty to Love and Protect': mineral springs and the moral register of changing climates in Mongolia'
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Research sharing to public audience 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact PDRA Turk shared research on shamanic healing in Mongolia at a public event on 1 Dec 2020 co-hosted by the Cambridge University Social Anthropology Society and the Cambridge Psychedelic Society to a mixed academic and public audience. Approximately 40 people attended the zoom event. The 50 minute talk entitled 'Native-zing Therapies: Shamanic healing and the value of homeland connection in Mongolia' was followed by 40 minutes of discussion and questions.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description Talk at internationa conference Association for Asian Studies Annual Conference March 24-27, 2022, Honolulu, Hawai?i. 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact A paper was presented entitled "Formation and function of Mongolian religious network: with a case of Neichi Toyin-Mergen Gegen Lineage" on a panel "Remapping Inner Asia and the Himalayas through Buddhist Networks" Association for Asian Studies Annual Conference March 24-27, 2022, Honolulu, Hawai?i
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Talk at international conference/forum in Cambridge 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact 'Making and mobilizing healing heritage during pandemic times: comparative notes across the Mongolian-Chinese border' (Joint presentation Uranchimeg Ujeed with Elizabeth Turk at Cambridge Mongolia Forum) at the Cambridge Mongolia Forum on the 16th of December 2022
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Talk to Mind Reflection Forum in Mongolia 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Talk at the first Mind Reflection Forum, hosted by the Mongolian government and Narovanchen gegeenten at Ikh Tengeriin Am in Ulaanbaatar. 100 'young people' (ages 18-45) (i.e. influencers) of different professions, to understand the importance of the mind and mindfulness, and 'spread the word' to their networks. I gave a 20 minute presentation called 'Setgel, social relations, and change: the ethics of being 'setgel's creature' in an increasingly mindfulness-oriented world'.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022