Home > Society & social sciences > Sociology & anthropology > Anthropology > Physical anthropology & ethnography > A Punjabi Village in Perspective: Book I: A Punjabi Village in Pakistan: The Community; Book II: The Economic Life of a Punjabi Village: The Land and the Economy
A Punjabi Village in Perspective: Book I: A Punjabi Village in Pakistan: The Community; Book II: The Economic Life of a Punjabi Village: The Land and the Economy

A Punjabi Village in Perspective: Book I: A Punjabi Village in Pakistan: The Community; Book II: The Economic Life of a Punjabi Village: The Land and the Economy

          
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About the Book

The two volumes, the award-winning A Punjabi Village in Pakistan and The Economic Life of a Punjabi Village are based on extensive fieldwork in Pakistan and contain relevant insights into Pakistani society, particularly women, still pertinent today, as well as a more holistic and humanistic view of village life. Eglar's study is useful for precisely what she focused on--the patterns of ritual service and gift exchange which underlay every facet of life in the village.

Together the two books present an in-depth outsider-insider perspective into the social and economic patterns of a village in Pakistan prior to the Green Revolution of 1958 which heralded the beginnings of change in village agriculture and land ownership.

Of particular advantage to the research was the fact that Eglar's sources of information were not limited to one or the other gender. As a guest of the Chowdhry family she could initially stay in the baithak (guest house), traditionally an all-male preserve situated close to the main house where villagers would gather over a smoke and chat after their day's work. In addition, as a woman, she could freely enter the women's domain and participate in and observe their daily activities.

In her work, Eglar found unwritten social contracts and relationships known as vartan bhanji that bound the community at different levels. The well-established networking patterns of vartan bhanji cemented relationships within the family. These patterns then extended beyond the family to the wider village community and further, to other villages in the area. The unwritten code also sustained professional relationships between the landowning zamindars, the tenant farmers and the kammis (literally, 'those who work', people in service professions). Vartan bhanji in the male domain revolved around farming and its associated trades, with various reciprocal exchanges moving the economy along, rather than cash payments. However, women played a central role. It is this dual aspect that Eglar details in the sequel.

Eglar's Mohla studies together make an important contribution to the understanding of women's role in this predominantly Muslim, agrarian society. A Punjabi Village records women as being central to the interdependent process. Women continued the traditions of vartan bhanji that bound the social fabric of the village together, with the vartan bhanji primarily taking place through the daughter of the house. In the community-managed pattern of resolving disputes, they were also in a key position as married daughters or 'daughters of the village' who linked two households or villages and could mediate in quarrels. These findings countered the prevailing wisdom about women's roles particularly in such a rural, predominantly Muslim setting. The Economic Life of a Punjabi Village takes this observation further: Women were central not just to the social relationships of the village culture but also to the village economy and to the economic well-being of their families.

Although many things have now changed, women today still retain their positions as managers of the house and family and social relationships in the village and beyond. It is they who determine what staples are needed-like salt or maize-and when. Some take care of these purchases themselves, going into town if needed. This role remains an active rather than a passive one, and counters the stereotype of Muslim women as submissive or irrelevant as decision makers.

An especially interesting aspect of the studies is that Eglar uses human stories to illustrate larger patterns and issues.

About the Author:
Zekiye Suleyman Eglar was born on December 10th, 1910 in Georgia, one of the 'little Russias' under the Czar. Her mother Lalendar was the daughter of a Georgian prince, and her father Suleyman Pasha, a general in the Czar's army, hailed from Azerbaijan. Their life in the southern Caucasus was strongly rooted in a Muslim cultural heritage. After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 Suleyman Pasha took his family to the safety of Baku in Azerbaijan but died soon afterwards. The family moved to the newly independent Republic of Turkey around 1923. Kemal Ataturk honoured the family of the anti-communist Suleyman Pasha, a hero in Turkey, and bestowed the surname 'Eglar' (intelligence) upon Suleyman's family. Zekiye Suleyman Eglar died on 29 March 1983.

Young Zekiye attended the American Collegiate Institute where she later taught English, mathematics and manual arts, as well as cultural anthropology at Ankara University. She obtained her BA from the American College for Girls (later Roberts College) in Istanbul, a Masters in Education at Smith College for Women, and a PhD at Columbia University. Zekiye Suleyman Eglar died on 29 March 1983.


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Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9780195477238
  • Publisher: OUP Pakistan
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Height: 147 mm
  • No of Pages: 350
  • Spine Width: 33 mm
  • Weight: 766 gr
  • ISBN-10: 0195477235
  • Publisher Date: 01 Jun 2010
  • Depth: 32
  • Language: English
  • Returnable: Y
  • Sub Title: Perspectives on Community, Land, and Econmy, Book I : a Punjabi Village in Pakistan, Book II : the Economic Life of a Punjabi Village
  • Width: 226 mm


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