"Peripheral" labour ? : studies in the history of partial proletarianization

Bibliographic Information

"Peripheral" labour ? : studies in the history of partial proletarianization

edited by Shahid Amin and Marcel van der Linden

(International review of social history, Supplement ; 4)

Cambridge University Press, 1997

  • : pbk

Search this Book/Journal
Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume takes an alternative look at the notion of 'wage-workers'. The contributors suggest that the idea of a 'pure' working class should be reconsidered and examine specific South Asian and Latin American case studies. A large part of the working class in the so-called third world and also in the main capitalist countries is either free (but coerced through non-economic means) or does hidden work labor e.g. as formally self-employed producers. By rethinking the fundamental assumptions of 'classical' labor and working-class history, the volume contributes to the development of a non-Eurocentric historiography.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction Shahid Amin and Marcel van der Linden
  • 1. Colonialism, capitalism and the discourse of freedom Gyan Prakash
  • 2. The barriers to proletarianization: Bolivian mine labor, 1826-1918 Erick D. Langer
  • 3. Labour, ecology and history in a Puerto Rican plantation region: 'classic' rural proletarianizations revisited Juan A. Giusti-Cordero
  • 4. Coal and colonialism: production relations in an Indian coalfield, c.1895-1947 Dilip Simeon
  • 5. 'Capital spectacles in British frames': capital, empire and Indian indentured migration to the British Caribbean Madhavi Kale
  • 6. Unsettling the household: Act VI (of 1901) and the regulation of women migrants in colonial Bengal Samita Sen
  • 7. Sordid class, dangerous class? Observations on Parisian ragpickers and their Cites during the nineteenth century Alain Faure
  • Notes on contributors.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1
Details
Page Top