Jusqu’au 30.9.2024, le code EBOOK20 donne droit à une réduction de 20% sur tous les e-books Stämpfli. Il suffit de saisir le code de réduction à la caisse dans le champ correspondant.
Thèmes principaux
Publications
Services
Auteurs
Éditions
Shop

Forging Political Identity

Silk and Metal Workers in Lyon, France 1900-1939

Contenu

"With this book Keith Mann carries forward a vital tradition of North American labor history inspired by the work of Charles and Louise Tilly. Constructed around the dialectics of skill, technological change, and the organization of the labor process in Lyon's two key industries, while grounded in the distinctiveness of a particular spatial community shaped dynamically through time, it casts the politics of the Popular Front era in a strikingly original light." · Geoff Eley, University of Michigan "This is an important book of exceptionally-high academic quality. With great skill, Mann documents and analyzes the influence of technology and work organization on the character of labor militancy. This book notably advances our understanding of these issues." · Michael Hanagan, Vassar College "Keith Mann has written an important book that should be read not only by historians and social scientists but by all interested in movements for social change." · Gerald Friedman, University of Massachusetts Amherst Escaping the traditional focus on Paris, the author examines the divergent political identities of two occupational groups in Lyon, metal and silk workers, who, despite having lived and worked in the same city, developed different patterns of political practices and bore distinct political identities. This book also examines in detail the way that gender relations influenced industrial change, skill, and political identity. Combining empirical data collected in French archives with social science theory and methods, this study argues that political identities were shaped by the intersection of the prevailing political climate with the social relations surrounding work in specific industrial settings. Keith Mann is Associate Professor of Sociology at Cardinal Stritch University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He specializes in 19th- and 20th-century French social and labor history. His work has appeared in the International Review of Social History, International Labor and Working Class History, Labor History, and Le mouvement social.

Informations bibliographiques

avril 2010, 280 Pages, International Studies in Social History, Anglais
Ingram Publishers Services
978-1-84545-645-0

Sommaire

Mots-clés

Autres titres de la collection: International Studies in Social History

Afficher tout

Autres titres sur ce thème