Page 1
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 58 14-11-2022 04:32:50 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 2
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 58 14-11-2022 04:32:50 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
UNIT - IV
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 59 14-11-2022 04:32:52 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 3
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 58 14-11-2022 04:32:50 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
UNIT - IV
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 59 14-11-2022 04:32:52 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
In the first chapter we looked at the many kinds of
diversity in our lives. We also explored how living in
different regions has an effect on the work people
do, the kinds of plants, trees, crops or things that
become important to them. In this chapter we will
look at the different ways in which people earn
their living in villages. And here too, as in the first
two chapters, we will examine whether people
have equal opportunities to earn a living. We will
look at the similarities in their life situations and
the problems that they face.
Chapter 7
Rural
Livelihoods
1. Describe the work that you see people doing in the above
pictures.
2. Identify the different types of work that are related to farming
and those that are not. List these in a table.
3. In your notebook draw some pictures of work that you have
seen people do in rural areas and write a few sentences that
describe the work
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 60 14-11-2022 04:32:52 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 4
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 58 14-11-2022 04:32:50 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
UNIT - IV
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 59 14-11-2022 04:32:52 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
In the first chapter we looked at the many kinds of
diversity in our lives. We also explored how living in
different regions has an effect on the work people
do, the kinds of plants, trees, crops or things that
become important to them. In this chapter we will
look at the different ways in which people earn
their living in villages. And here too, as in the first
two chapters, we will examine whether people
have equal opportunities to earn a living. We will
look at the similarities in their life situations and
the problems that they face.
Chapter 7
Rural
Livelihoods
1. Describe the work that you see people doing in the above
pictures.
2. Identify the different types of work that are related to farming
and those that are not. List these in a table.
3. In your notebook draw some pictures of work that you have
seen people do in rural areas and write a few sentences that
describe the work
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 60 14-11-2022 04:32:52 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Rural Livelihoods / 61
morning and snacks like vadai, bonda
and mysorepak in the evening. Near
the teashops in a corner lives a
blacksmith family whose home serves
as their workshop. Next to their home
is a cycle hire and repair shop. Two
families earn a living by washing
clothes. There are some people
who go to the nearby town to work
as construction workers and lorry
drivers.
The village is surrounded by low
hills. Paddy is the main crop that
is grown in irrigated lands. Most of
the families earn a living through
agriculture.
Kalpattu village
K
alpattu is a village that’s close
to the sea coast in Tamil Nadu.
People here do many kinds of work.
As in other villages, here too there
is non-farm work such as making
baskets, utensils, pots, bricks,
bullock-carts etc.
There are people who provide
services such as blacksmiths, nurses,
teachers, washermen, weavers,
barbers, cycle repair mechanics and
so on. There are also some
shopkeepers and traders. In the main
street, which looks like a bazaar, you
Transplanting paddy is back-breaking work.
will find a variety of small shops such
as tea shops, grocery shops, barber
shops, a cloth shop, a tailor and
two fertiliser and seed shops. There
are four teashops, which sell tiffin –
such as idli, dosai and upama in the
There are some
coconut groves around.
Cotton, sugar cane and
plantain are also grown,
and there are mango
orchards. Let us now
meet some people who
work in the fields in
Kalpattu and see what
we can learn about
farming from them.
Thulasi
All of us here work on
Ramalingam’s land.
He has twenty acres
of paddy fields in
Kalpattu. Even before I was married
I used to work on paddy fields in my
parental village. I work from 8.30 in
the morning till 4.30 in the evening
and Karuthamma, Ramalingam’s wife,
supervises us.
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 61 14-11-2022 04:32:54 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 5
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 58 14-11-2022 04:32:50 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
UNIT - IV
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Livelihoods
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 59 14-11-2022 04:32:52 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
In the first chapter we looked at the many kinds of
diversity in our lives. We also explored how living in
different regions has an effect on the work people
do, the kinds of plants, trees, crops or things that
become important to them. In this chapter we will
look at the different ways in which people earn
their living in villages. And here too, as in the first
two chapters, we will examine whether people
have equal opportunities to earn a living. We will
look at the similarities in their life situations and
the problems that they face.
Chapter 7
Rural
Livelihoods
1. Describe the work that you see people doing in the above
pictures.
2. Identify the different types of work that are related to farming
and those that are not. List these in a table.
3. In your notebook draw some pictures of work that you have
seen people do in rural areas and write a few sentences that
describe the work
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 60 14-11-2022 04:32:52 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Rural Livelihoods / 61
morning and snacks like vadai, bonda
and mysorepak in the evening. Near
the teashops in a corner lives a
blacksmith family whose home serves
as their workshop. Next to their home
is a cycle hire and repair shop. Two
families earn a living by washing
clothes. There are some people
who go to the nearby town to work
as construction workers and lorry
drivers.
The village is surrounded by low
hills. Paddy is the main crop that
is grown in irrigated lands. Most of
the families earn a living through
agriculture.
Kalpattu village
K
alpattu is a village that’s close
to the sea coast in Tamil Nadu.
People here do many kinds of work.
As in other villages, here too there
is non-farm work such as making
baskets, utensils, pots, bricks,
bullock-carts etc.
There are people who provide
services such as blacksmiths, nurses,
teachers, washermen, weavers,
barbers, cycle repair mechanics and
so on. There are also some
shopkeepers and traders. In the main
street, which looks like a bazaar, you
Transplanting paddy is back-breaking work.
will find a variety of small shops such
as tea shops, grocery shops, barber
shops, a cloth shop, a tailor and
two fertiliser and seed shops. There
are four teashops, which sell tiffin –
such as idli, dosai and upama in the
There are some
coconut groves around.
Cotton, sugar cane and
plantain are also grown,
and there are mango
orchards. Let us now
meet some people who
work in the fields in
Kalpattu and see what
we can learn about
farming from them.
Thulasi
All of us here work on
Ramalingam’s land.
He has twenty acres
of paddy fields in
Kalpattu. Even before I was married
I used to work on paddy fields in my
parental village. I work from 8.30 in
the morning till 4.30 in the evening
and Karuthamma, Ramalingam’s wife,
supervises us.
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 61 14-11-2022 04:32:54 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
62 / Social and Political Life
This is one of the few times in the
year that I find regular work. Now I
am transplanting the paddy, when the
plants have grown a bit Ramalingam
will call us again for weeding and then
finally once again for the harvesting.
When I was young I could do this
work with no difficulty. But now as I
grow older I find bending for long
hours with my feet in water very painful.
Ramalingam pays Rs 40 per day. This
is a little less than what labourers get
in my home village, but I come here
because I can depend on him to call me
whenever there is work. Unlike others,
he does not go looking for cheaper labour
from other villages.
My husband, Raman is also a
labourer. We don’t own any land.
During this time of the year he sprays
pesticides. When there is no work on
the farm he finds work outside, either
loading sand from the river or stone
from the quarry nearby. This is sent
by truck to be used in nearby towns to
make houses.
Apart from working on the land, I
do all the tasks at home. I cook food for
my family, clean the house and wash
clothes. I go with other women to the
nearby forest to collect firewood. About
one kilometre away we have a village
borewell from where I fetch water. My
husband helps in getting materials such
as groceries for the house.
Our school-going daughters are the
joy of our lives. Last year, one of them
fell ill and had to be taken to the hospital
in town. We had to sell our cow to pay
back the money we borrowed from
Ramalingam for her treatment.
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
Harvesting
Weeding
Transplanting
Preparing
saplings
December
Based on the above diagram would
you say that Thulasi earns money
throughout the year?
1. Describe the work that
Thulasi does. How is it
different from the work
Raman does?
2. Thulasi gets paid very little
money for the work she
does. Why do you think
agricultural labourers like
her are forced to accept low
wages?
3. In what ways would her way
of earning a living have been
different if Thulasi owned
some farm land? Discuss.
4. What are the crops grown in
your region or nearby rural
area? What kinds of work do
agricultural labourers do?
Unit_IV Ch 7.indd 62 14-11-2022 04:32:54 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
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