Frembgen, Jürgen Wasim, and Paul Rollier 2014. Wrestlers, pigeon fanciers, and 
kite flyers: Traditional sports and pastimes in Lahore. New York: Oxford 
University Press. 192 pp., ill. 
In today's Pakistan the dominant conservative mindset tends to marginalize 
leisure activities. However, traditional sports and pastimes, games and play, 
entertainment and amusement are an expression of happiness and joy and an 
integral part of popular culture. They represent a cultural system and preserve 
cultural values.
The dimension of playfulness inherent in traditional sports and pastimes is 
clearly articulated in the culture of the Punjab in general and of Lahore in 
particular, especially in the Walled City. The popular pastimes selected for 
this study, namely wrestling, flying pigeons and kite fighting, are almost 
emblematic of the Walled City, an urban space where wrestlers, pigeon fanciers 
and kite flyers appear to be the veritable custodians of Lahori culture.
This is the first book that details these traditional sports and pastimes, 
which, the authors argue, form an integral part of social life in Pakistan and 
create important bonds between various communities.

Best wishes, Asko

> On 17 Oct 2023, at 19.17, Dániel Balogh via INDOLOGY 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Dear Colleagues,
> can anyone recommend (and perhaps share) any useful literature about kites in 
> India? I mean the ones with a bamboo frame that you fly on a string, not the 
> ones with feathers that fly themselves and eat rats. I'm mainly interested in 
> general overviews, about the history of Indian kites and about kite flying, 
> kite making and kite fighting in modern India, not so much in any narrowly 
> specialised details, but anything is welcome. I've skimmed "A Kite Journey 
> through India" by Tal Streeter and "A Different Freedom" by Nikita Desai, but 
> the former is far more interested in anecdote than in checking and reporting 
> any facts, while the latter, even while being a mine of interesting detail, 
> seems to be by and large a haphazard and incoherent collection of poorly 
> verified, often repetitive, usually incomplete, and sometimes contradictory 
> factoids.
> In addition to generalities, I would be happy to learn if any of you have 
> come across references (or possible references) to kites in Sanskrit, or in 
> vernacular literature before the 16th century. For the former, I'm only aware 
> of the Pañcatantra story about the wooden Garuḍa, which is more a flying 
> machine than a kite. For the latter, I know about a verse by Nāmdev, but no 
> others.
> Many thanks for any tips,
> Dan
> 
> _______________________________________________
> INDOLOGY mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology

_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology

Reply via email to