Artisans and Crafts: Material Culture and Traditional Industries of Bengal
MTA
A field guide to Bengal's weaving, pottery, metalwork, and woodcraft traditions and their socio-economic histories
2nd Edition
*Artisans and Crafts: Material Culture and Traditional Industries of Bengal* is a comprehensive field guide that explores the living history and socio-economic dynamics of artisanal traditions across the Bengal delta. The book moves from the "material landscapes" of the region—detailing how the local geography provides the essential silt, fibers, and minerals for production—to an in-depth mapping of specific craft clusters. It examines the pedagogical structures of apprenticeship and lineage, emphasizing how master artisans pass down embodied knowledge through kinship and caste-based systems. Detailed case studies cover iconic traditions such as Jamdani weaving, Bankura terracotta, Dokra metal casting, and the narrative scrolls of Patachitra, treating these crafts not as static museum pieces but as adaptive industries shaped by ecological and cultural rhythms.
The text situates these crafts within a complex historical arc, tracing the evolution of markets from the era of Mughal patronage and the exploitative export cycles of the East India Company to the political revitalization of handwork during the Swadeshi movement. It provides a sobering analysis of the impacts of the 1947 and 1971 partitions, illustrating how the displacement of communities led to new "skill flows" and the resettlement of traditions in borderland regions. The narrative then transitions into the modern era, analyzing the effects of 1991’s economic liberalization, the rise of "ethnic chic" in urban malls, and the organizational shift toward cooperatives and self-help groups designed to bypass exploitative middlemen.
In its concluding chapters, the book addresses the contemporary crises and innovations defining the future of Bengali craft. It highlights the acute risks posed by climate change, specifically how rising salinity and erratic monsoon flooding threaten the raw materials essential for pottery and weaving. The text also explores the "digital turn," noting how e-commerce and social media allow a new generation of artisans to find global patrons, though often while navigating a persistent digital divide. Ultimately, the book argues for a holistic revival strategy that integrates formal education, equitable finance, and protective policy roadmaps to ensure that these traditional industries remain viable livelihoods in an increasingly globalized world.
This book is essential for anthropologists, design historians, and cultural researchers studying material culture and traditional industries. It will particularly benefit craft practitioners, cooperative organizers, and NGO workers seeking to understand and support artisan livelihoods in Bengal. Policy makers developing cultural heritage initiatives and designers collaborating with traditional craftspeople will find valuable insights into sustainable revival strategies. Students and academics in fields like textile history, postcolonial studies, and sustainable development will appreciate its grounded, practice-based approach to craft as a living system.
April 4, 2026
49,453 words
3 hours 28 minutes
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