Logo
Faith and Industrial Reformation: Basel Mission in Malabar and South Canara

Faith and Industrial Reformation: Basel Mission in Malabar and South Canara

Jaiprakash Raghaviah
935 1050 (11% off)
ISBN 13
Barcode icon
9788121214186
Year
Year icon
2018
The Basel Mission, a Swizz/German Protestant Christian missionary organization established in Basel, in Switzerland, started its work in India, in the districts of Malabar and South Canara of the erstwhile Madras Presidency from 1834. During the period ending up with the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, the Mission initiated a number of economic activities which eventually culminated in the establishment of large modern industries in the lines of modern handloom weaving and tile manufacture. These industries, established to give employment to the converts who had lost their jobs as a consequence of their conversion to Christianity, were the first post- Industrial Revolution type factories in the Malabar and South Canara districts and were comparable to the similar industrial undertakings in Europe during the period. This book examines the Basel Mission industries in context of the theological orientation of the Mission, the social, economic and colonial environment under which these industries functioned. The book also examines the trajectory of growth of tile and weaving industries in Malabar and South Canara districts in the lines demonstrated by the Basel Mission industries. ABOUT THE AUTHOR:- Jaiprakash Raghaviah is a banker turned social scientist. His stint with the State Bank of India included a posting at the Economic and Statistical Research Department at its Corporate Office at Mumbai. He later did his M Phil in Applied Economics from the Jawaharlal Nehru University. Since then he has been engaged in research in applied economics, economic history and also in tribal studies. He has served as faculty of the Indian Institute of Bank Management, Guwahati, and at the Centre for Research and Education for Social Transformation (CREST), Kozhikode (Calicut). He was awarded the Senior Research Fellowship by the Indian Council of Social Sciences Research, New Delhi. Prof. Raghaviah also worked for a term as Manager of the Malabar Christian