000 01764nam a2200205Ia 4500
008 230203s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9788189995010
082 _aMISC
_bHUY
100 _aHuyler, Stephen P
245 0 _aDaughters of India: Art and Identity
260 _aAhmedabad
_bMapin Publishing
_c2008
300 _a264
_rHardbound
504 _aOne in every six women in the world lives in India, more than the combined female populations of North America, the European Union and the Middle East. Yet most people outside India know little about Indian women, who often receive confusing and inaccurate press covering. Daughters of India: Art and Identity profiles 20 women from diverse communities ranging from the rice paddies of far southern India to the tea plantations of the Himalayas and from the dry western deserts to the verdant east coast. They represent everywoman: the traditional and the contemporary, the repressed and the highly innovative, the outcast and the entrepreneur. In their battles against adversity, their own words express their innate strength. All of these women are connected by a single thread: creative expression. Some view themselves as artists while others would be surprised to be identified in this manner, but each woman creatively embellishes her daily or seasonal life. Indian women are often completely unconscious of their artistry, and it is only recently that they have drawn any attention. The book is about change in the face of almost impossible odds, personal initiative that carves out a new identity, and implacable insistence on the cognition of human rights.
650 _aArt
650 _aCase studies
650 _aIndia
650 _aWomen artists
650 _aWomen's studies
942 _cBKS
999 _c897
_d897