Available Formats
The Politics of Global Craft
By (Author) D Wood
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
16th October 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Design, Industrial and commercial arts, illustration
Comparative politics
Hardback
400
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
As climate change, war, social injustice, gender and racial inequality, unchecked technology and exploitative capitalism remain urgent issues, the worldwide craft community has responded in notable ways. In this follow-up to Craft is Political (Bloomsbury, 2021), D Wood and contributors demonstrate how global circumstances have given rise to additional craft scholarship that further interrogates the political agency of craft.
With extensive global focus, this book features twenty-two essays on craft and politics that transcend the familiar Euro-American canon and demonstrate change through craft. Particular attention is brought to the Global South with authors writing about Brazil, Chile, India, Laos, Malaysia, Morocco, Nigeria and Thailand.
Chapters look at the erasure of Moroccan women weavers stories and digital archiving of Black craftspeople in the USA. They explore pottery and eel pots critical to the identity of Virginian Indian tribes, and womens roles in Nigeria as depicted in ceramic art. One author reveals the revival of traditional practices in Laos, and another the increasing recognition of previously-maligned Sami people of Sweden. Essays also explore craft sustainment in Finland, hand loom weaving in colonial north India, womens craft organizations in Northern Ireland and an Australian textile artists exhibition devoted to climate change grief. Craft by LGBTQ artists from Malaysia and Canada is included. The mix of essays is topical, enlightening and intended to be provocative of the political agency of craft.
The Politics of Global Craft is a compelling read. The chapters are informative and highlight the significance of craft in both local and global contexts. Perspectives from Black, LGBTQ, and non-Western scholars adds depth and diversity to the discourse surrounding craft practices. * Juliette Macdonald, Chair of Craft History and Theory, University of Edinburgh, UK *
D Wood is an independent craft and design scholar and currently teaches at OCAD University, Canada. Wood earned a PhD in Design Studies in 2012 at the University of Orago, New Zealand, and has an MFA in Furniture Design from the Rhode Island School of Design, USA. Her profiles of craft practitioners and reviews of exhibitions and books have appeared in an international array of publications, including American Craft, Ceramic Review, Fiberarts, Fine Woodworking, Metalsmith, Neues Glas and Textile Forum. She is also the editor of, and contributor to, Craft is Political (Bloomsbury, 2021).