Backgrounds of informants.
Abstract
A granary can represent a certain set of farming activities reflecting cultural and regional characteristics, and also be associated with symbolic meanings. The traditional raised-floor rice granary in Bali, Indonesia, called a Lumbung, only survives in specific areas of the island today. What is the factor underlying its survival and disappearance? The results of the author’s field research in Bali from 2006 to 2011 indicate that this is connected with the survival of local rice production, which was Bali’s traditional rice before being overtaken by the highly productive normal rice—introduced in the 1960s and 1970s. Today, local rice is cultivated only in a few specific areas such as Tabanan prefecture, where not only Lumbungs but also a set of traditional farming customs are still used. In addition, a clear conceptual connection between Lumbungs and local rice is observed, Such that local rice is exclusively offered in a Lumbung to the goddess Dewi Suri. Such practices suggest that the introduction and spread of the new normal rice not only changed the type of rice cultivated but also led to the decrease of traditional or “real” farming practices among local farmers, as represented by the decline of the Lumbung.
Keywords
- Granary
- Crop production cycle
- Cultural identity
- Agricultural landscape
- Paddy rice farming
- Ethnohistory
1. Introduction: Lumbung (raised-floor granary) and rice production cycle in Bali
This chapter discusses the
Architecture is the materialization of the function of a human activity space and thus represents certain set of human activities reflecting cultural and regional characteristics. Therefore, traditional architecture can be associated with not only practical activities but also symbolic meanings including the concept of sacredness and taboo and cultural identity. In the preservation of traditional architecture, we must therefore take a holistic view of both the practical and symbolic aspects of traditional structures in the mental landscape of local populations.
Among the various types of architecture, granaries are among the most commonly seen constructions. Food storage facilities emerged in the very early stages of human history and played a fundamental role in everyday landscapes [1]. The style of a granary not only reflects the subsistence strategy of each society but also the characteristics of its culture. Granaries have also been symbolic objects or stages for ceremonies and thus concern the human mental landscape.
Many ethnographic researchers have become interested in traditional granaries and their past functions and symbolism. For example, in Japanese scholarship, research has been mainly conducted in subtropical islands, such as [2–5] Amami and Okinawa Islands, Japan. These studies noted that sacredness or display of political power or wealth is associated with traditional granaries. Accordingly, a granary could be an instrument for connecting the economical and daily act of storing food with sacredness and politics. On the other hand, the perspectives of those studies tended to be limited to granaries themselves; the relationships of granaries to the overall routine associated with subsistence have not been sufficiently discussed. This ethnographic study on Bali focuses on this aspect of traditional granaries.
Bali has a traditional raised-floor granary for rice. Previously, granaries were called by several names depending on their size, as will be explained below. However, the number of granaries remaining today is much smaller, and size distinctions have been lost; therefore, in this chapter, traditional Balinese granaries are referred to as
Rice farming is vital in Balinese culture, and the
2. Background of the research: the history of Lumbung
Bali is a province of Indonesia and is located to the east of Java. It has a population of 3.89 million (as of 2010), covering 5633 km2 (Figure 1). Because of its location near the equator, its year-round temperatures range between 23 and 31°C, and the average annual rainfall is around 2000 mm in the province capital, Denpasar. It has a tropical humid climate with a dry season from April to November and a wet season from December to March [6–8]. The island is divided into eight prefectures (

Figure 1.
The map of Bali and locations of field research areas.
The
Covarrubias [9], a Mexican painter who lived in Bali in the 1930s, documented various aspects of the contemporary Balinese culture. Among them, he mentioned the raised-floor granary, noting that it was called by different names according to its size, such as
This standing of granaries in Bali appears to have continued into the 1960s. The book edited by Miyamoto [10], conducted as part of the “Rice Farming Culture in Southeast Asia” project, is a good authority on Bali during this period, with rather detailed descriptions of granaries as a part of rice farming culture. Ishikawa [11], as a member of the same project, recorded the classifications for granaries in Sesetan village, south of the capital city Denpasar. According to him, granaries that stocked more than 800 rice sheaves (10–11 kg/bundle) were called
However, in 1980s, it appears that the situation started to change, namely
These records on raised-floor granaries in Bali indicated that a remarkable shift occurred in the use and popularity of granaries in the 1970s and 1980s. What was the change? Why did the raised-floor granary disappear in most areas in Bali, and why did it survive in specific areas such as Tabanan prefecture? To answer these questions, the study of the present state of the
3. Field research (2006–2011)
The field research was conducted from 2006 to 2011, and the detailed results have been published elsewhere [1, 14–18]. The research method involved interviewing farming families on the
Prefecture ( |
Village ( |
Informants | Cultivated rice | No. of |
||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tabanan | Babahan | BB1 | Men (75 and 40 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1*/year, normal 1/year, |
1 |
Gunungsaridesa | GN1 | Man (62 years old); Woman (53 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1–2/year, normal 2/year, |
14 | |
GN2 | Man (86 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1–2/year, normal 1/year, |
1 | ||
Jati Luwih | JT1 | Woman (38 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1/year, normal 1/year, |
3 | |
JT2 | Woman (30s?) |
Land owner |
Local 1/year, normal 1/year, Injin, Keten |
2 | ||
JT3 | Woman (60 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1/year, normal 1/year |
5 | ||
JT4 | Man (27 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1/year, normal 1/year |
4 | ||
Kesambi | KS1 | Woman (55 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 2/year, normal 1/year |
1 | |
Penebel | PN1 | Woman (75 years old); Man (46 years old) |
Land owner** |
Local 1/year, normal 1/year |
1 | |
Senganan | SG1 | Man (80 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1/year, normal 1/year |
1 | |
SG2 | Men (42 years old & 36 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 1/Year, normal 2/year, |
3 | ||
Wongayagede | WG1 | Man (45 years old) |
Land owner |
Local 2/year, |
1 | |
WG2 | Woman (60s?) |
Land owner |
Local, |
2 | ||
Gubug | GB1 | Woman (80 years old) |
Land owner |
Normal 3/year | 2 | |
GB2 | Woman (60s?) |
Land owner |
Normal 2/year | 1 | ||
Sudimara | SD1 | Man (55 years old) |
Land owner |
Normal 2/year | 2 | |
Gianyar | Sebatu | SB1 | Man (45 years old) |
land owner |
Local 2/year, |
3 |
Karangasem | Ababi | AB1 | Woman (65 years old) |
Land owner** |
Normal 2–3/year | 1 |
Jasi | JS1 | Man (50 years old) |
Land owner |
Normal 3/year | none | |
JS2 | Woman (50s?) |
Tenant | Normal | none | ||
JS3 | Man (64 years old) |
Tenant | Normal | none | ||
Selat | SL1 | Man (60 years old) |
Tenant | Local 1/year, normal 2/year. |
none | |
SL2 | Man (70 years old) |
Land owner |
Local, normal, |
none (1 |
||
SL3 | Woman (43 years old) |
Land owner |
Normal 2/year, |
1 |
Table 1.
*The number indicates harvest number within 1 year shifting.
**Not farming his/herself.
3.1. Survival of the Lumbung and its relationship to rice type
The results of the field research suggested the high possibility that the survival of the
3.1.1. Lumbung today
As previously mentioned, the author interviewed primarily households that owned
The surviving
The

Figure 2.
Traditional style of

Figure 3.
Most

Figure 4.
Utilization of the second floor beneath the raised-floor of a
Some

Figure 5.
Decorated
In Wongayagede village, Tabanan prefecture, the shape of

Figure 6.
Several regulations and taboos associated with
It is reported in [11] that the
None of the
In terms of the symbolism associated with the
3.1.2. The Lumbung and cultivated rice
Next, we discuss how the type of cultivated rice and the survival of
Paddy field rice cultivation was introduced in Bali through the Dong Son culture, which spread across Southeast Asia around the fifth to third centuries BC [7]. Paddy field rice became the staple food of the islanders, and paddy fields were reported to occupy 17% of the island’s area in the 1960s [20]. Today, rice is still the fundamental food in Bali, and a meal is not considered “proper” without rice [15]. Tubers, which are eaten as staple foods in many other tropical regions, and bread, which was introduced through Western cultures, are also eaten but are treated as merely snacks. Rice is also considered the best of all crops [6]. In the author’s interview, many interviewees said that “rice is the food of human beings, but tubers are for pigs” (such as JT1, JT3, WG1, SD1, JS1, JS2 SL2, SL3).
In present-day Bali, two types of rice are cultivated. One is the traditional “local rice (
Tabanan prefecture is a representative and well-known area of local rice farming, and most of these also cultivate normal rice. Among the author’s interviewees, only the farmers of Wongayagede village cultivated local rice but not normal rice. In addition, the field research revealed villages in other prefectures that also regularly cultivated local rice, namely Sabato village in Gianyar prefecture and Selat and Ababi villages in Karangasem prefecture. In case of the villages in Karangasem, only specific households of the villages continued exclusive local rice cultivation. Among these, a household in Sabato and one in Selat cultivated local rice only, but other households produced local rice and normal rice.
In general, those regions of continued local rice cultivation seem to originally have had high yields of rice because of rich water sources. On the other hand, the areas that have now completely turned to normal rice cultivation seem to have had lower rice production. Before the introduction of normal rice, the current yields of 2–3 rice harvests per year were impossible except in especially productive areas such as Tabanan prefecture. In other areas, farmers rotated cultivation of rice and dry field crops such as tubers and peanuts. It is recorded in [20] that in the 1960s, rotating cultivation was practiced in 70% of Bali’s farmlands. According to the author’s interviews with farmers, local rice cultivation is still maintained in the few areas where multiple rice harvests were possible even before the introduction of normal rice introduction, whereas in the rotating-cultivation areas, which comprise the majority of Balinese farmlands, the introduction of normal rice now enables several rice harvests a year. In these areas, rotating cultivation with dry field crops is still conducted as needed.
The author’s field research surveyed 24 households (Table 1), and among them, 19 owned
Three households in Wongayagede of Tabanan and Sebatu of Gianyar (WB1, WB2, SB1) fit into category 1. Remarkably, their
The majority of the surveyed households (11) fit into category 2 and were all in Tabanan prefecture. The noticeable feature of

Figure 7.
Harvesting local rice.

Figure 8.
Harvesting normal rice.

Figure 9.
Normal rice threshing in the field.
Five households fall into category 3, that is, only cultivating normal rice. Of these, three were in the South Tabanan villages of Gubug and Sudimara, and one each was in the villages of Ababi and Selat in Karangasem. In fact, these were rather exceptional cases since the majority of farmers in Bali who cultivate only normal rice do not own
For the comparative study, the author also interviewed some households without
In summary, these examples show that the
Therefore, the survival of the
Next, we discuss the fundamental difference between local rice and normal rice production routines and their connection to the
3.2. Comparison of production routines of local rice and normal rice
It has already been mentioned that the harvesting methods of local rice and normal rice clearly differed, and other conspicuous differences also distinguished their production and processing routines.
First, the tools used in their production were typically different. The most obvious difference was in the harvesting tools. To harvest local rice, a traditional handmade picker called an

Figure 10.
Traditional handmade picker (
Second, the organization of planting and harvesting also differed between the two rice types. On the one hand, both planting and harvesting of local rice were basically conducted on a family basis, and normally, fewer than five people worked together in the field. Sometimes, other farmers from the village joined to help in keeping with the traditional
In connection with the work organization issue, the rhythm of annual work scheduling also seems to differ between local rice and normal rice farmers. Local rice farmers plant and harvest rice on a fixed schedule shared with other farmers in their village, whereas normal rice planting and harvesting are rather random in timing, even within in a single village (for details, see [15]). In addition, several ceremonies were traditionally performed at critical stages of the rice production cycle by the whole village [15]. While these ceremonies are mostly no longer observed, the village-shared scheduling of farming routines again seems to reflect a more traditional way of farming.
In addition, the gender division in work responsibilities appeared to differ between the two types of rice, though information collected in this study on this area is still limited. Interviewee BB1 said “Rice harvesting has been the responsibility of women from the old times. But anyone can harvest normal rice.” Indeed, normal rice was normally harvested by a mixed group of men and women, according to the author’s observation, whereas almost all harvesting workers for local rice were women. Furthermore, all interviewees said that threshing and dehusking with a mortar and a pestle were exclusively women’s job, but this work division was discontinued when the threshing and dehusking machine was introduced. It is suggested that traditional gender roles could have also disappeared with the introduction of normal rice and new farming techniques.
Third, the author also conducted interviews regarding the farmers’ perceptions of the two rice types, and, again, clear differences emerged. When asked about local rice, all the interviewees gave positive comments such as “I love the taste” (JT1, JT3, SG1), “It contains a lot of vitamins” (SG2, SB1, KS1), “It is filling” (JT3), “It is not easily infected by germs” (AB1, JT3), and “It does not require much fertilizer” (AB1). It is intriguing that even AB1, who had already completely stopped producing local rice, made such comments. In contrast, the only positive, uniform comment all interviewees made about normal rice was “It can be harvested more quickly than local rice.” Obviously, local rice holds special value for Balinese farmers that normal rice does not despite the fact that normal rice production is now much more common across Bali. Apparently reflecting this perception, many farmers who cultivate both local and normal rice (such as JT1, JT3, BB1, SL2, GN2) clearly distinguished the uses of the two types of rice: Local rice was for home consumption, and normal rice was for selling outside the community. In fact, the standard price of local rice in the market was higher than that of normal rice. According to the interviewees the author interviewed in July 2006, local rice sold at 6000–7000 rupia per kilogram, whereas normal rice sold for 4500 rupia per kilogram. Therefore, for profit, it would be better to sell local rice and eat normal rice themselves, but in reality, farmers do the opposite. This also shows the strong mental attachment to local rice among Balinese farmers. Yet, it must be also noted that some people who were not originally farmers but started farming as a business have recently begun cultivating local rice to sell for profit (such as PN1). This suggests that the perceptions of Balinese rice farming are gradually shifting.
Related to the perception issue, ritual practices related to rice farming also seemed to be influenced by the introduction of normal rice. Bali is called the “Island of the Gods” because of the numerous ceremonies and offerings for various occasions, which are deeply rooted in Balinese daily life. There are also a number of ceremonies associated with rice farming (see [15]), though some of these, particularly village-based ceremonies, are no longer regularly practiced, as mentioned above.
In addition, it is notable that the rice placed in a
KS1 was also a local and normal rice producer and, in contrast to other such farmers, stored both types of rice together in the
SD1 did not produce local rice at all and stored normal rice in the
Above all, it can be said that the introduction of normal rice not only resulted in the shift in the type of cultivated rice but also led to the erosion of traditional farming routines, tool making, work organization, gender-based labor divisions, and ritual practices. On the basis of these field research results, we now discuss the reasons for the disappearance/survival of the
4. Discussion: what is the significance of the Lumbung ?
The preceding discussion raises the question of the nature of connection between the
In summary, it appears that agricultural activities associated with local and normal rice form coherent circles (Figure 11). All elements involved in local rice production, such as working style, utilities, and tools used, seem to be based on tradition. On the other hand, activities for normal rice production seem to be based on the concept of efficiency, positively introducing new styles of work. It is thus likely that the

Figure 11.
Conceptual circles concerning local rice and normal rice.
Moreover, it seems that each of the two coherent circles is sustained by different shifts in the mentality of Balinese people. In interviews, farmers often expressed a strong mental attachment to local rice, even those who no longer cultivated it, describing it as “tasty,” “good,” “nutritious,” and so on. Almost all the farmers said that they would like to eat local rice as much as possible. In contrast, no value was attached to normal rice other than its being “productive.” Indeed, among farmers mix-cultivating local and normal rice, many said that they saved local rice for their own consumption and sold normal rice commercially. This reflects the perception of local rice as real food and normal rice as more of a cash crop. The general consensus was that because local rice is real food, it is produced in a more “real” way using traditional facilities and tools and proper ceremonies, whereas with people do not care about normal rice and thus change their production methods for greater efficiency.
Above all, the traditional circle of local rice seems to be sustained by the Balinese people’s idea of “real rice production,” and the
5. Prospects: promotion of agriculture in Bali and the Lumbung
In modern-day Bali, the decrease of farmlands and populations under the pressure of the tourism industry is a serious problem. To promote rice farming, it would be effective to protect local rice cultivation and
Although rice terraces in Tabanan and Gianyar are among the most popular and highly promoted sightseeing spots,
Acknowledgments
The field research was supported by the Grants-in-Aid of Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) below: Promotion Grant “Constructing Foundation for Japanese Archaeobotany: Data collection of Jomon and Yayoi excavated botanical remains and ethnographic research” (No. 17904030, Fiscal Year 2005, Principal Investigator: Aoi Hosoya), Grant-in-Aid (A) “Ritual and Landscape of Paddy Rice Culture in East Asian Villages” (Fiscal Year 2004–2007, Principal Investigator: Tadashi Ebisawa), and Young Scientists Starting-up Grant “Rethinking Prehistoric Subsistence Strategy in Japan Archipelago: Ethnographic research to construct foundation of archaeobotany” (No. 19820059, Fiscal Year 2007–2008, Principal Investigator: Aoi Hosoya)
The author would also like to thank Professor Takuma Yogo (Waseda University) for his great help for the author to start research in Bali, Mr Nyoman Lai for his thorough work as a translator and driver, and Enago (www.enago.jp) for the English language review.
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