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Status and Context: Sri Lankan Potter Women Reconsidered After Field Work in India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Deborah Winslow
Affiliation:
University of New Hampshire

Extract

In February 1989, in Pune, a city of a million people in the western Indian state of Maharashtra, I visited a simple outdoor pottery workshop. It consisted of a shallow pit kiln surrounded by eleven spaces shaded by gunny sacks on a flat area at the top of stairs leading down to a large river that ran through the city center. The families who used this space were kumbhars, members of a Hindu caste group found throughout the subcontinent. In India to teach, I thought that time spent with these potters might provide a perspective on Sinhalese potters I had known in a Sri Lankan village in the 1970s. The Indian potters were willing, so this first visit was followed by many more over the next four months.

Type
Gendered Economies
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1994

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