1st Edition

Indigenous Architecture in India Exploring Plural Lifeworlds

By Gauri Bharat Copyright 2024
    214 Pages 49 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    214 Pages 49 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    This volume focuses on socio- spatial practices of indigenous communities in India. It explores the interrelation between the built environments and lifeworlds, i.e. practices, patterns, and structures of everyday life. The chapters deal with different ideas and definitions of indigeneity, while also addressing the complex equations between the production and perception of built forms, indigenous technologies, on the one hand, and social, environmental and political contexts, questions of aesthetics, identity, and self-representation on the other.

    From Adivasi art and sacred sites to craft villages and nomadic pastoralists in western India, from indigenous bangle makers in urban north India to terracotta crafts people on the south, each chapter focuses on different communities and the contours of their contemporary lifeworlds. The contributions actively attempt to foreground the logic and perspectives of the communities themselves as the epistemological centre of the architectural and material discourses on indigeneity.

    This book will be useful for students, teachers, and researchers of architecture, urban design, urban studies, urban development and planning, anthropology, sociology, and museum studies. It will also be of interest to urban planners and designers, policy planners, local government authorities, and professionals engaged in the discipline.

    Introduction: Indigenous Architecture in India
    Gauri Bharat


    1. Studying Bachchom Bayer Ba: The Indigenous Floor Art of Kolhan
    Sanjay Nath and Rinu Kumari

    2. The Sacred Grove and the Livelihood and Identity of Santals
    Sumit Hembram and Amit Kumar Kisku

    3. Flooded Villages, Foldable Houses, and Flexible Living
    Sprya Sharma

    4. Decoding a Craft Habitat
    Jigna Desai

    INTERLUDE: Exploring Indigeneity and the City
    A Conversation with Neelkanth Chhaya

    5. Placing Indigeneity in the networks of glass-bangle making in Firozabad
    Anjali Mittal

    6. Ecological Knowledge and Everyday Life of Vagadiya Rabaris
    Chintal Sharma

    7. Terracotta People: Productive Tensions Between the Indigenous and the Colonial
    Priya Joseph

    8. Dialogue between Carpenters and Mud Masons: Cases from Telangana and Goa
    Sankalpa

    9. Material Culture and Change at Chota Oda
    Smit Vyas

    10. Community, Spaces and Environment
    Manvi Seth

     

    Biography

    Gauri Bharat is Senior Associate Professor and Program Chair of Architectural History and Theory at the Faculty of Architecture, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India. Her research and teaching focuses on lived histories, where she explores how built environments in the past were shaped by and in turn shaped the individual and collective lives of people. The other major focus area is histories of making, where she is working on a book manuscript on the history of reinforced concrete use in the Indian subcontinent. Gauri has published extensively and engages with both academic and non-academic audiences.