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Alice K. Butterfield, Mulu Yeneabat
(Beteiligte)
Pottery Production as an Asset for Women´s Livelihood
The Kechine Women Potters in Addis Ababa, Ethopia
2010. 80 S. 220 mm
Verlag/Jahr: VDM VERLAG DR. MÜLLER 2010
ISBN: 3-639-29235-9 (3639292359)
Neue ISBN: 978-3-639-29235-0 (9783639292350)
Preis und Lieferzeit: Bitte klicken
Pottery production, even though it requires toil and dirties the potters with mud and smoke, it gives them great pleasure and happiness as a means of livelihood. One potter explains, "There is no thing which could satisfy me as what pottery could satisfy me. It is by pottery that I am living a satisfactory life and can support my children." Another potter wishes that "the entire world could be a potter." In expressing her love for the art, another potter says that the customary non-working days of Saturdays and Sundays each week "are too long for me. I am eager for Monday to start my pottery. When I produce pottery, even if I am sick, I feel healthy. I like to produce pottery even though I have a hard pain, my pottery will treat and cure me."
Mulu Yeneabat (MSW) has 31 years of work experience in administration,as research assistant and project officer. Alice K. Butterfield (PhD, MSW) is Professor at University of Illinois at Chicago and contributed to the re-opening of the School of Social Work at Addis Ababa University.She is the Principal Investigator of two projects in Ethiopia.