Contested communities : class, gender, and politics in Chile's El Teniente copper mine, 1904-1948

Author(s)

    • Klubock, Thomas Miller

Bibliographic Information

Contested communities : class, gender, and politics in Chile's El Teniente copper mine, 1904-1948

Thomas Miller Klubock

(Comparative and international working-class history)

Duke University Press, 1998

  • : cloth : alk. paper
  • : pbk. : alk. paper

Other Title

Contested communities : class, gender, and politics in Chile's El Teniente copper mine, 1904-1951

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [337]-346) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Contested Communities Thomas Miller Klubock analyzes the experiences of the El Teniente copper miners during the first fifty years of the twentieth century. Describing the everyday life and culture of the mining community, its impact on Chilean politics and national events, and the sense of self and identity working-class men and women developed in the foreign-owned enclave, Klubock provides important insights into the cultural and social history of Chile. Klubock shows how a militant working-class community was established through the interplay between capitalist development, state formation, and the ideologies of gender. In describing how the North American copper company attempted to reconfigure and reform the work and social-cultural lives of men and women who migrated to the mine, Klubock demonstrates how struggles between labor and capital took place on a gendered field of power and reconstituted social constructions of masculinity and femininity. As a result, Contested Communities describes more accurately than any previous study the nature of grassroots labor militancy, working-class culture, and everyday politics of gender relations during crucial years of the Chilean Popular Front in the 1930s and 1940s.

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