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Action Research in the Artisan Sector
Collaboration: UWCN (Wales); NISTADS
(Delhi, India)
The Dhokra Artisans of Bankura, West Bengal:
A Case Study and Knowledge Archive of Technological Change in
Progress
This collaborative study between UWCN and NISTADS
is concerned with a process of technological change in the traditional
cire perdue (dhokra) brass-making craft as it is practised
by one group of families in Bikna Village, near Bankura in West
Bengal, India. This change was initiated and coordinated by
the Indian CSIR (Council for Scientific and Industrial Research)
agency NISTADS (National Institute for Science, Technology and
Development Studies). It involved replacing an ancient traditional
but inefficient metal-foundry technique with another which is
almost as ancient but more efficient. The impact of this apparently
simple change on the Dhokra practice has been both profound
and rapid.
The case study work carried out by the EU-India
Network project suggests that that multimedia technologies make
it possible to develop adequate representations of skilled performance
mediated by the craftsman him- or herself. Particularly valuable
in this respect is the capacity of multimedia systems to use
a full range of modalities of description, including video,
sound, still image, conventional text and technical diagrams.
This technology makes it possible to present very complex information
in a variety of formats and contexts. The study is therefore
part of a wider exploration of the potential capability of multimedia
as a tool for ethnographic research.
In the long term, however, the artisans face
serious decisions about the craft. On one hand, they may choose
to follow the route to industrialisation, illustrated here by
the case of Netai Karmakar. On the other hand, and this is what
they appear to prefer, they can develop towards a consumer market
based on high quality high aesthetic value artefacts. This could
possibly be found supplying high craft content artefacts to
a growing tourist and indigenous middle class market.
The continuation and development of the Dhokra
industry depends on the artisans finding a stable market niche
for themselves and their products. Whatever it proves to be,
this market needs to be developed and supply chains established.
It is easy to demonise the middle-men, but if the economic conditions
of the Karmakars become less marginal and their terms of trade
can be improved, then there is no reason at all why existing
middle-men may not have a major role to play in this market
development.
In the end, this is not simply a matter of
marginal economics. The Dhokra artisans of Bikna represent an
ancient craft which has been in continuous production for thousands
of years. The Bikna artisans are not primitive:
they are twenty first century people who happen to be trapped
in a cycle of poverty. Neither are they exhibit in a cultural
theme park. They must be free to determine their own future.
At the same time, they embody countless generations of knowledge,
and this knowledge is part of the cultural heritage not only
of India but also of mankind. Whatever direction the craft takes
in the future, it would be tragic if all this knowledge and
the accumulated wisdom of millennia were to be lost.
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