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“...The Maintenance of Virtue Over Time: Notes on Changing Household Lives in Post-Disaster Nepal Andrew Haxby Although it is banal to say the series of earthquakes that hit Nepal in Spring 2015 will radically change the country, what this change will consist of still remains undetermined. As many earthquake victims learn to make do in broken houses, tents, or corrugated tin structures, post-earthquake Nepal seems held within a frustrating stasis, wherein temporary hardship is often impossible to distinguish from lasting consequence. Yet this sense of stasis is in part misleading. While the act of building remains slow, households who lost their homes have been scramblingto rethink their financial futures in order to afford reconstruction. In doing so, many earthquake victims have begun to enact changes in their households, accelerating divisions and unearthing tensions that had hitherto been allowed to lie dormant. Revitalizing Meyer Fortes' classic discussions of amity and the development...”
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“...dieko chaina” (They haven’t given us anything). According to both her and her neighbors who were also living in this temporary shelter, her relationship with her husband had been strained from before the earthquake, with him often spending long periods in Dholaka despite no immediate need to do so. Indeed, the ‘us’ in the above quote seemed to refer to her and her daughter only. Even more than Sanjay and Lhakpa, Sapana’s finances were extremely limited. She worked at a small phone shop, though not her own, earning NRs 5-6,000 a month, while her husband did not seem to contribute any financial help to her household. Several years before the earthquake she had a job working as a seamstress for a local cooperative, but had to quit that job when her mother became sick with cancer. Her mother died before the earthquake, by which point Sapana’s finances were depleted. Now she had only NRs 5,000 in an account at a cooperative. Her daughter had a volunteer job at an NGO dedicated to women’s economic...”
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“...my focus has been on all the small tears the earthquake has made in Nepali society, and how they might change the fabric as a whole. Though in many ways much less “knowable” than government initiatives, I believe it is at the household level where we get closest to the destruction, to the actual event of the earthquake. Yet here too time is a factor. Though the earthquake has changed the balance between legal documentation and other elements of household construction, this might very well be temporary, the balance slowly easing back to where it was as the material structures of home are built and lived in. Several officials I talked to in both the Authority and in related NGOs said they believed that the earthquake would result in more robust and powerful bureaucratic practices, a positive effect in their view, and part of Nepal’s official mission to ‘build back better’ since the earthquake. Yet, counteracting this, there seems to be a real desire to reconstruct amity, to bring this destruc-...”