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‘Selling of Identity’: the Dumbara Hand Weavers of Thalagune

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dc.contributor.author de Silva, S.
dc.date.accessioned 2015-05-26T05:15:19Z
dc.date.available 2015-05-26T05:15:19Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.identifier.citation De Silva, Sulari 2015. ‘Selling of Identity’: the Dumbara Hand Weavers of Thalagune, International Conference on the Humanities 2015: New Dynamics, Directions and Divergences (ICH 2015), University of Kelaniya, Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. 21-22 May 2015. (Abstract) p.46. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/7736
dc.description.abstract The hand weavers of Thalagune are well-known for the art and the tradition of Dumbaraweaving which brings with it, all the elements that represent the craft’s place of origin and its artistic representation.Thalagune is a remote village in Udu-dumbarain Kandy District, where most of the Dumbara wearers have been living for centuries. Today, in Thalagune,there are about nine families engaged in Dumbara weaving. They rely on the sale of their products as the sole means of living.Theirtextile products were used mostly by the Kandyan aristocrats in ancient times and are much sought after at present as well. Established as a craft community during the Kandyan period, it became a significant political and sociocultural institution. During this period, the community’s social position and identity as a less privileged service caste in the agricultural society were determined not on the ‘auric value’ of the craft which was based on the distinctive motifs, choice of materials, skills and knowledge of weaving; but on the ‘cultic value’which was based on thesocial traditions and its organizing structure of the mode of production of the craft such as social hierarchy, production relations, sense of duty, obligation, and cults and myths. At present, even under the capitalist system, ‘commoditisation’ of traditional crafts has brought about changes in the designs and the methods of production, and has severely affected the authorship and the authenticity of the craft. Many Dumbara weavers of this community are becoming deskilled, losing their traditional knowledge, role and the industry; and they have begun working instead in other professions. The reason for this appears to be that the weavers have not benefited either from the feudal or the capitalists socio-economic systems, and continue to lead underprivileged lives. The main purpose of this study is to understand the changing nature of the craft and the weavers’ community of Thalagune. Why is the weavers’ community less privileged and hasnot benefitedfrom the capitalist economic system? Why are they unable to sustain their industry in its original form? Why does the weavers’ community have to change their identity whileothers sell their identity to earn profits? Why cannot they be a part of the economic growth of the country? Theanalysis of this study draws on Newton Gunasinghe’s The Changing Socio-Economic Relations in the Kandyan Countrysidein which he considers the causes of this situation.Gunasinghe explains that ‘the capitalist growth was not a simple phenomenon in traditional societies like it is in Sri Lanka, as such societies have a specific characteristic in it, to reproduce, under its hegemony, the production relations of the pre-capitalist era.According to Gunasinghe, this occurs becauseofthe ‘reactivation of archaic production relations in peasant agricultural society under conditions of peripheral capitalism’. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Kelaniya en_US
dc.title ‘Selling of Identity’: the Dumbara Hand Weavers of Thalagune en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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