Networks, Labour and Migration among Indian Muslim Artisans
Thomas Chambers
Networks, Labour and Migration among Indian Muslim Artisans provides an ethnography of life, work and migration in a North Indian Muslim-dominated woodworking industry. It traces artisanal connections within the local context, during migration within India, and to the Gulf, examining how woodworkers utilise local and transnational networks, based on identity, religiosity, and affective circulations, to access resources, support and forms of mutuality. However, the book also illustrates how liberalisation, intensifying forms of marginalisation and incorporation into global production networks have led to spatial pressures, fragmentation of artisanal labour, and forms of enclavement that persist despite geographical mobility and connectedness.
By working across the dialectic of marginality and connectedness, Thomas Chambers thinks through these complexities and dualities by providing an ethnographic account that shares everyday life with artisans and others in the industry. Descriptive detail is intersected with spatial scales of ‘local’, ‘national’ and ‘international’, with the demands of supply chains and labour markets within India and abroad, with structural conditions, and with forms of change and continuity. Empirically, then, the book provides a detailed account of a specific locale, but also contributes to broader theoretical debates centring on theorisations of margins, borders, connections, networks, embeddedness, neoliberalism, subjectivities, and economic or social flux.
Thomas Chambers is an Anthropologist with a PhD in Social Anthropology from the University of Sussex. He has lengthy experience researching in India, specifically the geographical region of North-West Uttar Pradesh, and his focus covers migration, urban space, conviviality, government documents and paperwork, digitisation, labour, Islam, and artisans. Thomas is currently Senior Lecturer at Oxford Brookes University and continues to regularly engage in fieldwork in India and the Gulf.
1. Marginalisation, connectedness and Indian Muslim artisans: an introduction
2. A brief history of Indian Muslim artisans
3. The Indian craft supply chain: money, commodities and intimacy
4. Muslim women and craft production in India: gender, labour and space
5. Apprenticeship and labour amongst Indian Muslim artisans
6. Neoliberalism and Islamic reform among Indian Muslim artisans: affect and self-making
7. Friendship, urban space, labour and craftwork in India
8. Internal migration in India: imaginaries, subjectivities and precarity
9. Labour migration between India and the Gulf: regimes, Imaginaries and continuities
10. Marginalisation and connectedness: a conclusion
Glossary of Hindi, Urdu and Arabic terms
References
Index
Format: Paperback
Size: 234 × 156 mm
292 Pages
30 colour illustrations
Copyright: © 2020
ISBN: 9781787354548
Publication: April 30, 2020
Series: Economic Exposures in Asia
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