In 1900, Sheffield was the tenth largest city in the world. Cutlery “made in Sheffield” was used across the globe, and the city built armored plate for the navy in the run-up to the First World War. Today, however, Sheffield’s derelict Victorian shop floors and industrial buildings are hidden behind new leisure developments and shopping centers.
Based on an extended period of research in two local steel factories, this book combines a lively, descriptive account with a wide-ranging critique of post-industrial capitalism. Its central argument is that recent government attempts to engineer Britain’s transition to a post-industrial and classless society have instead created volatile post-industrial spaces marked by informal labor, industrial sweatshops and levels of risk and deprivation that divide citizens along lines of gender, age, and class. The author discovers a link between production and reproduction, and demonstrates the centrality of kinship relations, child and female labor, and intra-household exchanges to the economic process of de-industrialization. Paradoxically, government policies have reinvigorated working-class militancy, spawned local industrial clusters and re-embedded the economy in the spatial and social structure of the neighborhood.
表中的内容
Acknowledgements
Introduction
- Anthropology of Labour
- Bourgeoisie and Proletarians
- History and Class
- Technological Fetishism
- Class and Kinship
- Notes on Fieldwork
PART I: ARTISANS
Chapter 1. Morris Ltd
- The Factory as Socio-technical Space
- The Shop Floor
- The Market
- The Formal Organization
- Informal Organization
- A Short Social History of the Machines
- The Social Distribution of Knowledge in Morris
- Discussion about Value in the Break-room
- Political Economy
- Conclusion
Chapter 2. The ‘Return’ of the Informal Economy in Endcliffe
- The Informal Economy Debate in Anthropology
- Informal Production
- Informal Exchanges
- Sex Market: the Elysium Khaled’s
- Conclusion
Chapter 3. Working-class Homes
- Working-class Families and Poverty
- The ‘Post-kinship’ Turn Governmental
- Families and New Extended Households
- Conclusion
Chapter 4. Welcome to Political Limbo
- Local History of Working-class Politics
- Folk Models of Class
- From Steel Town to Leisure Centre
- Cutlers versus Developers
- Fish, Fishermen and Steelworkers
- Reclaiming the Body: Sickness Benefit
- Conclusion
PART II: PROLETARIANS
Chapter 5. Unsor Ltd
- The Place
- The Production Process and Formal Organization
- A Normal Day at the Smelting Shop
- ‘Every Furnace is like a Good-looking Woman’
- Stories of ‘Gods’ and ‘Donkeys’ during Break-times
- The Rolling Mill
- The Grinding Bay
- Health and Safety Politics at Bay 2
- Farewell to Manual Labour
- Conclusion
Chapter 6. A Divided Proletariat
- Charlie Moody: from Working-class to Nursing
- The Strange Disappearance of Charlie Moody
- Being Italian in Worksop: Antonio Masso
- Pepperoni, Lampascioni and Vino Rosso: A Food Journey from the South of Italy to South Yorkshire
- Returning ‘Home’
- Epilogue
- Conclusion
Chapter 7. Community Unionism, Business Unionism – Two Strategies, the Same Phoenix
- Transmutations of Labour Representation
- The Phoenix Flies on the ISTC Divisional Office
- The ISTC in UNSOR
- Political Meeting at the ISTC or Community Unionism in Action
- The Same Phoenix, Different Trajectories
- Reorganization
- The AEU Factory
- Branch Business
- Unionism in Times of Reorganization
- Conclusion
Conclusion
- Farewell to the Working Class?
- Labour and Alienation as Relational Values
- Relational Consciousness as the Basis for Class Struggle
Bibliography
Index
关于作者
Massimiliano Mollona has been Lecturer in Social Anthropology at Goldsmiths College, London, since 2003. After an Italian Laurea in Economics, he received his Ph.D. and MSc in Anthropology from the London School of Economics. He is a co-editor of Critique of Anthropology and Reviews Editor of Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (JRAI). His recent publications include ‘Gifts of Labour. Steel Production and Technological Imagination in an Area of Urban Deprivation, Sheffield, UK’ in Critique of Anthropology, 25(2) and ‘Factory, Family and Neighbourhood. The Political Economy of Informal Labour in Sheffield, UK’ in JRAI. (N.S.) 11. He has published widely on labour issues and steel production.