We Who Wove with Lotus Thread: Summoning Community in South India
Aarti Kawlra
Price
1260.00
ISBN
9789352871728
Language
English
Pages
216
Format
Hardback
Dimensions
140 x 216 mm
Year of Publishing
2017
Territorial Rights
World
Imprint
Orient BlackSwan

Our thread is different from the thread of the brahmin.
They have the Vedas, we have weaving.

We Who Wove is the first in-depth ethnographic study of the Telugu-speaking Padma Saliyars of Tamil Nadu, who claim a high status among hereditary weaving castes. The Padma Saliyars consider themselves ‘on par’ with brahmins, claiming difference through their ‘thread’ and the divinely ordained work of weaving. Their origin myth as recorded in the Bhavanarishi Puranam pronounces weaving as a divine boon, referring to their longstanding recognition and status as those who wove with lotus thread. Approaching community not as a closed and unchanging world but as a dynamic one, the study contributes to the growing scholarship on re-articulations of caste in South Asia. Using methods of both history and ethnography, it reveals the ‘hidden histories’ of artisan caste affirmation and community belonging in mobilising for production.

The author beautifully reconstructs the organisation of the weaver household and the meticulous work that goes into producing a Kanchipuram silk sari, highlighting the unity of the work, the loom and the weaver. She explores handloom weaving in light of the different regimes of value—craft (as opposed to machine) aesthetic, traditional technology, cottage industry and embodied work—that define its lived reality in South India. She also addresses the need for a new approach to the subject of artisans in India, given the lack of critical anthropological and historical works on the subject.

Providing descriptions and analyses of hitherto unpublished material supplemented with photographs, this volume will be a valuable addition to the fields of ethnography, anthropology and sociology.    

Aarti Kawlra is an independent scholar affiliated to the Madras Institute of Development Studies (MIDS), Chennai and the International Institute of Asian Studies (IIAS), Leiden, The Netherlands.

List of Figures and Tables
Publisher’s Acknowledgements
Foreword by Prasannan Parthasarathi 
Author’s Preface and Acknowledgements
Note on Transliteration

1.  Claims of Community

2.  Reform and Revival: Making of a Handloom Tradition

3.  Sustaining Production: Leadership and Cooperative Conflicts

4.  Weaving as Sacrament

5.  Reproductive Household: Work, Loom and the Body

6.  Mobilising Value: Authentic and Auspicious Design

7.  Concluding Reflections

Bibliography
Appendix
Index

Release Date: 24-03-2018 Venue: Chennai
1. We Who Wove with Lotus Thread by Aarti Kawlra | Book Shelf, The Statesman, New Delhi, 19 April 2018
2. Caste as Capital | Frontline (Fortnightly), Chennai, February 2019
3. The Silk Route | The Hindu, New Delhi, 2 September 18
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