How to Cite

Gerke, Barbara: Taming the Poisonous: Mercury, Toxicity, and Safety in Tibetan Medical Practice, Heidelberg: Heidelberg University Publishing, 2021 (Heidelberg Studies on Transculturality, Volume 7). https://doi.org/10.17885/heiup.746

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-96822-041-3 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-96822-042-0 (Hardcover)
ISBN 978-3-96822-043-7 (Softcover)

Published

04/08/2021
Dieses Werk ist unter der
Creative Commons-Lizenz 4.0
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
veröffentlicht.

Authors

Barbara Gerke

Taming the Poisonous

Mercury, Toxicity, and Safety in Tibetan Medical Practice

This rich ethnographic and socio-historical account uncovers how toxicity and safety are expressed transculturally in a globalizing world. For the first time, it unpacks the “pharmaceutical nexus” of mercury in Tibetan medicine (Sowa Rigpa) where, since the thirteenth century, it has mainly been used in the form of tsotel. Tsotel, an organometallic mercury sulfide compound, is added in small amounts to specific medicines to enhance the potency of other ingredients. In concordance with tantric Buddhist ideas, Tibetan medical practitioners confront and tame poisonous substances, and instead of avoiding or expelling them, transform them into potent medicines and elixirs.

Recently, the UN Environment Programme’s global ban on mercury, the Minamata Convention, has sparked debates on the use of mercury in Asian medicines. As Asian medical traditions increasingly intersect with biomedical science and technology, what is at stake when Tibetan medical practitioners in India and Nepal, researchers, and regulators negotiate mercury’s toxicity and safety? Who determines what is “toxic” and what is “safe,” and how? What does this mean for the future of traditional Asian medical and pharmaceutical practices?

Barbara Gerke (M.Sc., D.Phil., University of Oxford) is a social and medical anthropologist researching Tibetan medicine (Sowa Rigpa), mainly in Himalayan regions. She has been the principal investigator of several research projects on Tibetan medicine. Her current FWF (Austrian Science Fund) project Potent Substances in Sowa Rigpa and Buddhist Ritual is based at the University of Vienna.

Media coverage

Tawni Tidwell, in: History of Science in South Asia 12 (2024).

Chapters

Table of Contents
Pages
PDF
HTML
Front Matter
Table of Contents
v
A Note on Tibetan and Sanskrit Terms
1
List of Abbreviations
3-4
List of Illustrations
5–7
Acknowledgements
9–12
Maps
13–14
1: Introduction: "It takes time to tame a wild horse"
15–45
2: Setting the Scene: Poison and Potency
47–84
3: The Pharmaceutical Nexus of Mercury Practices
85–131
4: History and Knowledge Transmission
133–167
5: Blood and Semen: Women and Mercury
169–196
6: The Evidence of Safety
197–236
7: Taming the Poisonous and the Potent
237–261
8: Conclusions
263–278
Appendices
279–296
Glossaries of Tibetan and Sanskrit Terms
297–333
References
335–367
Index
369–379

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