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Neighborhoods of Madras: Social Fabric, Migration, and Daily Life MTA
Micro-histories of key wards and communities from Georgetown to Royapuram
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Neighborhoods of Madras: Social Fabric, Migration, and Daily Life *Neighborhoods of Madras: Social Fabric, Migration, and Daily Life* provides a comprehensive micro-history of the northern districts of Chennai, tracing the evolution of areas like Georgetown, Sowcarpet, and Royapuram from colonial trading outposts to dense industrial and commercial hubs. The book illustrates how the city’s identity was constructed not merely through British infrastructure, but through the intricate social networks of diverse migrant communities. Merchant networks from Western India, Armenian traders, and specialized artisan guilds established trust-based credit systems and communal governance structures—such as caste panchayats and merchant sabhas—that operated alongside and often bypassed formal colonial administration.

The narrative emphasizes the sensory and functional realities of daily life, moving from the "ledger literacies" of the counting house to the "shopfloor literacies" of the factory and the maritime rhythms of the fishing harbor. It highlights the vital, often invisible, economic contributions of women through home-based production and street vending, as well as the role of religious institutions in structuring the city's temporal and social organization. Each neighborhood is presented as a specialized ecological niche, where specific trades—from minting currency and pressing oil to washing clothes and processing salt—produced distinct architectural forms and social hierarchies.

In its later chapters, the book examines the resilience of these neighborhoods against the pressures of economic liberalization and natural disasters. It details the rise of labor unions in the docks and textile mills, the integration of refugees from Burma and Sri Lanka, and the enduring strength of mutual aid networks during cyclones and floods. Ultimately, the work portrays North Madras as a "braid" of modernity and tradition, where ancestral ties and informal community obligations continue to provide the essential infrastructure for urban survival and identity in the twenty-first century.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book presents micro-histories of Madras neighborhoods (Georgetown to Royapuram) revealing how trade, migration, and daily life wove the city's social fabric through street-level narratives, family archives, and union records.
  • Migration patterns—from Western Indian merchants and Telugu/Kannada artisans to fishing communities and Burmese/Sri Lankan refugees—continuously reshaped Madras's cultural and economic landscape while maintaining translocal connections.
  • Local institutions like caste panchayats, merchant sabhas, and unions provided resilience by translating colonial policies and market pressures into community-based governance, credit systems, and mutual aid networks.
  • Everyday practices—temple festivals, home-based kitchens, night classes, and women's street vending—formed the invisible infrastructure that stabilized urban life amid economic churn and environmental challenges.
  • Modernity in Madras emerged as a braid rather than a break, where older ties of kinship, caste, craft, and creed were repurposed to meet new demands of credit, schooling, salaried work, and mobility across historical eras.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for urban historians, social scientists, and students studying South Asian urbanization, migration, and informal economies. It will particularly benefit researchers interested in how marginalized communities build resilience through local institutions and everyday practices. General readers fascinated by Chennai's layered history and the human stories behind urban development will also find rich insights into the city's social evolution from the ground up.

Author:

Julie Rivera

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

March 29, 2026

Word Count:

51,089 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 35 minutes

Sample:

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