The Warrior Merchants
The standard image of Indian society emphasizes its largely agrarian economy and parochial outlook, yet this image ignores the major economic and political role of commerce and artisan production. This book presents a study of one of the most important artisan-merchant communities, the weavers, who form the second largest sector of the south Indian economy. It thus offers an important corrective to the unbalanced picture that we have of Indian social organization from those accounts that have focused almost exclusively on agrarian society. Professor Mines traces the role of the weaver-merchants in the organization, of south Indian states and society from the medieval period to the present, and shows that at times in their history they rivalled the status and power of the agriculturalists. He also demonstrates that, far from being provincial, the weavers have for centuries maintained supralocal organizations to administer their affairs and represent their interests. As the political economy has changed, so they have modified their organizations and created new ones better to fit changing conditions and interests.
Product details
March 2009Paperback
9780521105019
196 pages
229 × 152 × 11 mm
0.3kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The Kaikkoolars of Tamilnadu
- 2. The Kaikkoolars and the iDangkai (left-hand) and valangkai (right-hand) castes
- 3. Kaikkoolar beliefs and the order of their social world
- 4. The naaDu system
- 5. The caste association: the Senguntha Mahaajana Sangam
- 6. Caste, politics, and the handloom weavers' cooperative movement:
- 1935–1971
- 7. Interpreting the Kaikkoolars today: models of caste, weaving, and the state.