Proletarians and protest : the roots of class formation in an industrializing world
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Proletarians and protest : the roots of class formation in an industrializing world
(Contributions in labor studies, no. 17)
Greenwood Press, 1986
Available at / 29 libraries
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Kobe University Library for Human-Development Sciences
lib. bdg. : alk. paper366-0-24//17s040000163039*
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Doshisha University Library (Imadegawa)
: lib. bdg. : alk. paper361.4;P3450;8620055760/40;8620088669/91;8820165463/2J;8920029940
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Note
Bibliography: p. [231]-241
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this collection of essays a number of distinguished scholars examine the proletarianization process and its relation to social protest and class formation. The authors consider how the social origins of the industrial work force and the migration patterns that brought workers to industrial areas shaped the workers' developing identity and led them to participate in mass protests. The essays provide an overview of proletarianization in industrializing regions and in several different countries. Although the authors of these articles employ a variety of disciplines--anthropology, history, and sociology--all the essays deal with historical aspects of the process of class formation and the forging of a modern working class. The essays span three continents and two centuries, and the volume includes a comprehensive annotated bibliography of relevant works drawn from the suggestions of the contributors.
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