ABSTRACT

This book is a fascinating investigation into how communalism plays out in everyday India. Using the metaphor of tana-bana – the warp and the weft of the Banarasi sari – the author reproduces the interwoven life of Hindu-Muslim relations in the Banarasi sari industry.

As the city of Banaras in Uttar Pradesh takes the centre stage as the site of this ethnographic study, the author documents the dissonance in representations of Banaras as a sacred Hindu city and its essential plural character. The volume
• examines in-depth the lives of Banaras Muslims in the social and economic matrix of the sari industry;
• highlights how women negotiate between home, family and their place in the artisanal industry; and
• sheds light on their fast-changing world of the Banaras weavers and their responses to it.

With a new introduction and fresh data, the second edition looks at the subsequent developments in the weaving industry over the last decade. This volume will be of immense interest to scholars and researchers of social anthropology, gender studies, development studies, sociology and South Asian studies.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction to the Second Edition

The discourse of Banaras and the world of the Banaras weaver

chapter |20 pages

Introduction to the First Edition

chapter 1|28 pages

Hindu Banaras

Plural realities and singular representations

chapter 2|20 pages

Muslims in Banaras

chapter 3|38 pages

Banaras Muslims Today

Men and women in the warp and weft of the sari

chapter 5|28 pages

Of Home and the World

The homes and worlds of Banaras women

chapter 6|21 pages

The Vanishing World of the Julahas

The current crisis and its consequences

chapter 7|20 pages

Walking the Razor’s Edge

Narratives of two women

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion