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Shiptown - Between Rural and Urban North India (Paperback)
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Shiptown - Between Rural and Urban North India (Paperback)
Series: Contemporary Ethnography
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Total price: R770
Discovery Miles: 7 700
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Jahazpur is a small market town or qasba with a diverse population
of more than 20,000 people located in Bhilwara District in the
North Indian state of Rajasthan. With roots deep in history and
legend, Shiptown (a literal translation of landlocked Jahazpur's
name) today is a subdistrict headquarters and thus a regional hub
for government services unavailable in villages. Rural and town
lives have long intersected in Shiptown's market streets, which are
crammed with shopping opportunities, many designed to allure
village customers. Temples, mosques, and shrines attract Hindus and
Muslims from nearby areas. In the town's densely settled
center-still partially walled, with arched gateways intact-many
neighborhoods remain segregated by hereditary birth group. By
contrast, in some newer, more spacious residential areas outside
the walls, persons of distinct communities and religions live as
neighbors. Throughout Jahazpur municipality a peaceful pluralism
normally prevails. Ann Grodzins Gold lived in Santosh Nagar, the
oldest of Shiptown's new settlements, for ten months, recording
interviews and participating in festival, ritual, and social
events-public and private, religious and secular. While engaged
with contemporary scholarship, Shiptown is moored in the everyday
lives of the town's residents, and each chapter has at its center a
specific node of Jahazpur experience. Gold seeks to portray how
neighborly relations are forged and endure across lines of
difference; how ancient hierarchical social structures shift in
major ways while never exactly disappearing; how in spite of
pervasive conservative family values, gender roles are transforming
rapidly and radically; how environmental deterioration affects not
only public health but individual hearts, inspiring activism; and
how commerce and morality keep uneasy company. She sustains a
conviction that, even in the globalized present, local experiences
are significant, and that anthropology-that most intimate and
poetic of the social sciences-continues to foster productive
conversations among human beings.
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