Book Details

About the Author

Janet Rizvi, freelance writer and researcher, was brought up in Scotland and graduated with a Ph.D. in history from Cambridge. Married to an Indian Government officer, she spent many years in the state of Jammu and Kashmir. Her book Ladakh, Crossroads of High Asia (Oxford University Press, Delhi, 2nd edn. 1996) has been continuously in print for 25 years. She is also author of the highly praised Trans-Himalayan Caravans: Merchant Princes and Peasant Traders in Ladakh (Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1999). As well as writing the chapter "Woven Textiles" in The Crafts of Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh (ed. Jaya Jaitly, Mapin, Ahmedabad, 1989), She has contributed articles on the Kashmir shawl to several authoritative reference works: The Encyclopedia of Clothing and Fashion (Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 2004), The Encyclopedia of India (Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 2006), and The Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion (forthcoming from Berg Publishers, Oxford). She wrote the chapter "The Asian Trade in Kashmir Shawl" in Textiles from India, The Global Trade (ed. Rosemary Crill, Seagull, Kolkata, 2005).Monisha Ahmed is an independent researcher who has been visiting and writing about the Himalayan region of Ladakh since 1987. Many of those years were spent living among the nomadic herdspeople of Ladakh's high-altitude plateaux, researching their lifestyle with special reference to their textiles. Her book, Living Fabric-Weaving among the Nomads of Ladakh Himalaya (Orchid Press, Bangkok, 2002), based on her Oxford D.Phil. thesis, won the 2003 Shep Award of the Textile Society of America for the year's best book on ethnic textiles. Since then she has continued her research on the textile arts of Ladakh with essays published on silk-brocades, carpets, the contemporary trade in pashmina, textile production in Kargil district, and Tibetan textiles in exile. With Clare Harris she co-edited Ladakh, Culture at the Crossroads (Marg Publications, Mumbai, 2005). She is on the Advisory Committee of the upcoming Central Asian Museum, Leh.