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The Work of Retirement International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-20 Jeffrey Sklansky
In the past few decades, caregivers, such as nursing assistants and home health aides, have come to compose the fastest-growing segment of the paid workforce in the United States. At the same time, corporate caretakers of workers’ savings, such as pension funds and mutual funds, have become the nation's largest investors, bound by fiduciary duties of trust. And unprecedented numbers of elder employees
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From Forced to Voluntary Labour in Rural Africa: The Transition to Paid Voluntary Labour on the Roads of the Northern Territories of the Gold Coast International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-09-29 María José Pont Cháfer
Forced labour was central to the provision of public infrastructure in African colonies. Whereas current historiography focuses on the role of external drivers, such as humanitarian organizations or the Forced Labour Convention of 1930, in triggering change, no attention has been paid to the local initiatives that contributed to the end of forced labour. This article explores the transition to paid
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The Social Biographical Approach in Global Labour History: Editorial International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-03
Luis Inácio Lula Da Silva, originally a metalworker and trade union activist, was president of Brazil from 2003 to 2010, leading the largest country of Latin America, with more than 212 million people. In 2020, social and labour historian John D. French, with a long career devoted to Brazilian labour history, published the much acclaimed biography Lula and His Politics of Cunning: From Metalworker
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Biographies of Labor Activists: Trajectories, Daringness, and Challenges International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Alexandre Fortes, Benito Bisso Schmidt
This comment discusses three topics. First, John French's biography of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is located in the broader trajectory of the production of biographical narratives of activists under the auspices of the historiography of the labour movement. Second, French's daring gesture of comparing the trajectories of Lula and August Bebel, who lived in such different contexts, and the impact of
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Common Men, Exceptional Politicians: What Do We Gain from an Embodied Social Biographical Approach to Leftist Leaders like Germany's August Bebel and Brazil's Luis Inácio Lula da Silva? International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 John D. French
Lula and His Politics of Cunning explores the origin, roots, and evolution of Luis Inácio Lula da Silva's vision, discourse, and practice of leadership as a process of becoming. This commentary invites historians of labor movements and the left to think beyond their geographical and chronological specializations. It argues that there is much to gain from thinking globally if we wish to achieve meaningful
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The Politics of the Social Biographical Approach to Working-Class Leaders International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Melanie Nolan
In this paper, I consider John French's biography, Lula and His Politics of Cunning: From Metalworker to President of Brazil (2020). French discusses his methodology, which he characterizes as “a social biographical approach”. I argue that this methodology is already in historians’ toolkit. Historians writing biography seem to start with first premises rather than building on what went before. I thus
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The Social Biography: Pitfalls and Temptations International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Jan Willem Stutje
There were times – not so long ago – when it seemed that historical processes could be dissected as though human action did not matter. Those times have changed. Nowadays, scholarly biography is enjoying broad interest, also among social historians, as is shown in this issue of the IRSH, in which John D. French explains how biography can contribute to a better understanding of global labour history
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Working-Class Leaders and Their Political Work Between Civil-Societal Engagement and Class Conflicts: The Case of August Bebel – A Comment to John D. French International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Jürgen Schmidt
John D. French's stimulating article, which explores the scope for comparing working-class leaders across time and space, is considered in this contribution by reference to my biography of August Bebel and with a particular focus on the following topics: a) historical actors as shaped by their own particular time and place; b) the importance of personal relationships and networks in making people who
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The Social Welfare System in Bata Company Towns (1920s–1950s): Between Transnational Vision and Local Settings International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-07-04 Milan Balaban, Lukáš Perutka, Simon Paye, Dalibor Savić, Jan Herman
In the early twentieth century, the Bata company became one of the largest shoe manufacturers in the world, and an emblematic icon of family capitalism. This paper presents an overview of the social welfare system developed by the firm, first in its hometown of Zlín (Moravia) and then in more than thirty company towns founded in Czechoslovakia, Europe, and other continents from the 1920s to the 1950s
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Black Women Activists: Embracing the Struggle for Intertwined Freedoms on Multiple Fronts International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-06-01 Yevette Richards
Dorothy Cobble's magnificent, sweeping saga of the 100 plus year struggle for “full rights feminism” introduces us to myriad activists who sought common ground in the expansion of civil, political, economic and social rights as the key for raising the standard for working women, and by extension for all of humanity. However, as Cobble notes, some full-rights activists did not measure up to the potential
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“Each of Us is an Other” International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-05-31 Magaly Rodríguez García
Cobble's study of American social democratic feminism is a fascinating narrative of the lives of women who crossed the boundaries of class, race and nation-states to build a better world. Her chronological account of the careers and activism of these women is not only a major contribution to the history of feminism but also a significant addition to the study of social democracy worldwide.
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For the Many: A Review Dossier International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-05-31 Eileen Boris
This introduction to the review dossier on Dorothy Sue Cobble, For the Many: American Feminists and the Global Fight for Democratic Equality, introduces the major themes of the work in light of Cobble's earlier interventions in gendering labor history and focus on laborite activist women here called “full rights feminists”. It asks the contributors to expand on and decenter the transnational and global
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Full-Rights Feminists and a History of the Care Crisis International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-05-31 Jocelyn Olcott
In 2018, the International Labour Organization published a study about the critical role of paid and unpaid care work for the health of society, the economy, and the planet and about the ways that care work is sustained through the super-exploitation of women, particularly migrant women and racially and ethnically marginalized women. Dorothy Sue Cobble's sweeping, carefully researched, and beautifully
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‘A Gallant Fight’: The UAW and the 1970 General Motors Strike International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-26 Timothy J. Minchin
On 15 September 1970, over 400,000 workers struck General Motors (GM), the biggest corporation in the world. It was a massive walkout, lasting sixty-seven days and affecting 145 GM plants in the US and Canada. GM lost more than $1 billion in profits, and the impact on the US economy was considerable. Despite the strike's size, it has been understudied. Fifty years later, this article provides a re-assessment
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Being a Forestry Labourer in the Late Ottoman Empire: Debt Bondage, Migration, and Sedentarization International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-08 Başak Akgül
This article examines the survival strategies of forestry workers and craftspeople in the late Ottoman Empire. Through the example of the Tahtacı, a semi-nomadic community specialized in lumbering in the forests along the western and southern coasts of Anatolia, it visualizes the adaptation strategies of forestry labourers in the changing economic and ecological environment of the Mediterranean Basin
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Xenophobic Mob Violence against Free Labour Migrants in the Age of the Nation State: How Can the Atlantic Experience Help to Find Global Patterns? International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-30 Leo Lucassen
This article asks under what historical conditions people who consider themselves as belonging to the ingroup resort to collective violence against free labour migrants. Based on cases in the North Atlantic, and largely limited to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it offers a starting point for a more global approach. By using the concept of boundary work, I conclude that once ethnic boundaries
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Carmen Soliz. Fields of Revolution. Agrarian Reform and Rural State Formation in Bolivia, 1935–1964. [Pitt Latin American Series.] University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh (PA) 2021. xiv, 266 pp. Ill. Maps. $50.00. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Fernando Teixeira da Silva
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Radhika Singha. The Coolie's Great War. Indian Labour in a Global Conflict 1914–1921. Hurst & Company, London 2020. xxi + 372 pp. Ill. £45.00. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Touraj Atabaki
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Thomas Figarol. Les diamants de Saint-Claude, Un district industriel à l’âge de la première mondialisation, 1870–1914. Préf. de Jean-Claude Daumas. [Collection Perspectives Historiques, Enterprises.] Presses universitaires François-Rabelais, Tours 2020. 379 pp. Ill. Maps. € 24.00. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Janiv Stamberger
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Andrew G. Bonnell Red Banners, Books and Beer Mugs. The Mental World of German Social Democrats, 1863–1914. [Historical Materialism Book Series, Vol. 220.] Brill, Leiden [etc.] 2021. viii, 225 pp. € 135.00; $ 163.00. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Anna Strommenger
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Annelien De Dijn. Freedom. An Unruly History. Harvard University Press, Cambridge (MA) 2020. 426 pp. Ill. $35.00; £28.95; € 31.50. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Rachel Hammersley
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Between National and International: Women's Transnational Activism in Twentieth-Century Chile International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-10 María Fernanda Lanfranco González
This article explores the transnational dimension of women's mobilization in twentieth-century Chile and the connections they established with women's international non-governmental organizations, particularly the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and the Women's International Democratic Federation (WIDF). It sheds light on the political choices women made when forging transnational
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The WIDF's Work for Women's Rights in the (Post)colonial Countries and the “Soviet Agenda” International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-10 Yulia Gradskova
The primary aim of this article is to problematize the WIDF's interpretations of the rights of women from (post)colonial countries and its tactics in working for and together with these women. It shows that, in the context of rapid geopolitical changes – the growing anti-colonial struggle and Cold War competition – the WIDF had to change its ideology, ways of working, and communication strategies in
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A Gendered Approach to the Yu Chi Chan Club and National Liberation Front during South Africa's Transition to Armed Struggle International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-10 Allison Drew
South Africa's anti-apartheid struggle reflected an ideal of heroic masculinity that ignored and depreciated women as active political agents. This has contributed to a post-apartheid social order that accepts formal gender equality but that perpetuates gender inequality by discounting women's experiences. This article examines the little-known and short-lived Yu Chi Chan Club (YCCC) and National Liberation
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Women's Transnational Activism against Portugal's Colonial Wars International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-10 Giulia Strippoli
This article recovers the history of the transnational women's movement that arose during Portugal's colonial wars (1961–1974). This movement connected women in Portugal and its colonies and operated independently of the PCP, MPLA, PAIGC, and FRELIMO. Most research on women's activism in Portugal, Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Cabo Verde, and Mozambique begins with their relationships to the male-dominated
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Colonial Knowledge Economy: Handloom Weavers in Early Twentieth-Century United Provinces, India International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Santosh Kumar Rai
In existing historiography, the modernity discourse presents modern knowledge as being more economically efficient and technologically advanced compared to traditional skills. This theoretical lens has introduced a hierarchy of production and restructured the meaning of work and division of labour within the profession of weaving. Historically, the contexts of both the modern textile industry and traditional
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Introduction: Regulation and Domestic Service in Colonial Histories International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-02-18 Victoria Haskins, Samita Sen
This essay introduces the Special Theme on regulation and domestic service in colonial societies. It provides a brief overview of the key themes of domestic service and regulation in the history of colonial states, and reflects upon the ways in which the colonial past is deployed in contemporary calls for the regulation of domestic work by the state, to secure the rights and protections of present-day
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The War at the Workplace: Calcutta's Dockworkers and Changing Labour Regime, 1939–1945 International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-02-03 Prerna Agarwal
The upheavals of World War II prepared a new labour regime in twentieth-century India, in employers’ chambers, government offices, and in the newly established Labour Department, but as crucially, at the workplace and on the shop floor. This article studies the case of Calcutta port, an important military port in Southeast Asia after the fall of Singapore and Rangoon, where the complex historical processes
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Social Economy and Living Standards: Consumer Cooperatives in Barcelona, 1891–1935 International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-12-29 Francisco J. Medina-Albaladejo, Josep Pujol-Andreu
The living standards of the working classes during industrialization continue to be the subject of debate in European historiography. However, other factors closely related to the institutional setting, such as the role played by social economy and the institutions for collective action, are seldom considered. This study focuses on these factors, and attempts to quantify the social impact of consumer
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Genealogies of “Verification”: Policing the Master–Servant Relationship in Colonial and Postcolonial India International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-12-16 Nitin Sinha
Police verification of domestic servants has become standard practice in many cities in contemporary India. However, the regularization of work, which brings domestic servants under protective labour laws, is still a work in progress. Examining a long timespan, this article shows how policing of the servant, through practices of identification and verification, came to be institutionalized. It looks
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“We Go on Our Own Boats!”: Korean Migrants and the Politics of Transportation Infrastructure in the Japanese Empire International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-12-07 Derek Kramer
This paper examines transportation infrastructure in the Japanese empire and its role in positioning Korean migrants in the labor markets of the metropole. To do so, it focuses on the Pusan–Shimonoseki ferry which, between 1905 and 1945, transferred over 30 million people between Japan and Korea. During this time, the ships that comprised this ferry line helped articulate new borders between the metropole
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Stefan J. Link Forging Global Fordism. Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, and the Contest over the Industrial Order. [America in the World.] Princeton University Press, Princeton (NJ) 2020. vii, 316 pp. Ill. $39.95; £34.00. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-11-15 Vittorio Valli
diverse motivations and local flavors. The other half of the Amnesty recipe, as noted above, was fact-finding. This innocuous-sounding activity brought Amnesty into many difficult situations: entanglements with intelligence agencies; the imprisonment of unwary fact-finders; minor international incidents; and debates over the politics of information. Buchanan follows Amnesty through the crises it faced
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Tom Buchanan. Amnesty International and Human Rights Activism in Postwar Britain, 1945–1977. [Human Rights in History.] Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2020. xvii, 343 pp. £64.99. (Paper: £21.99; E-book: $23,00.) International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-11-15 Padraic Kenney
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Asian Migrant Workers in the Arab Gulf States. The Growing Foreign Population and their Lives. Ed. by Masako Ishii [The Intimate and the Public in Asian and Global Perspectives, Vol. 10.] Brill, Leiden 2020. xi, 266 pp. Maps. € 99.00; $120.00. (E-book: € 99.00; $120.00.) International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-11-15 Andrew Gardner
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Workers’ Inquiry and Global Class Struggle. Strategies, Tactics, Objectives. Ed. by Robert Ovetz. Pluto Press, London 2020, 288 pp. £75.00 (Paper: £19.99; E-book: £19.99) International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-11-15 Rosa Kösters
with hierarchies and differences themselves. Matsukawa impressively makes that point while simultaneously helping readers see the integral cohesion discernible in these durable subnational communities of migrants. The three excursuses that conclude the book are brief but invaluable. Rahman’s yields some basic detail about the Bangladeshi component of the foreign workforce in Arabia and their experiences
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The Art of Running Away: Escapes and Flight Movements During the Great Depression in São Tomé e Príncipe, 1930–1936 International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-09-28 Beatriz Valverde Contreras, Alexander Keese
As a coerced labour force living under repressive conditions, contract workers in São Tomé e Príncipe's cocoa plantations belong to a wider phenomenon of global plantation experience during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Flight appears as an important element of that experience and this article is an attempt to interpret the strategies of runaways in São Tomé's turbulent Great Depression years
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Revisiting White Labourism: New Debates on Working-Class Whiteness in Twentieth-Century Southern Africa – ERRATUM International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-08-16 Duncan Money,Danelle van Zyl-Hermann
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From Slaves and Servants to Citizens? Regulating Dependency, Race, and Gender in Revolutionary France and the French West Indies International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-08-13 Raffaella Sarti
A crucial aspect of the regulation of domestic service is the regulation of people's status. Because of its emphasis on freedom and equality, the French Revolution is particularly interesting. “Men are born and remain free and equal in rights. Social distinctions may be based only on considerations of the common good.” These principles of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen (26 August
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Judith Surkis. Sex, Law, and Sovereignty in French Algeria, 1830–1930. [Corpus Juris: The Humanities in Politics and Law.] Cornell University Press, Ithaca (NY) 2019. xvi, 335 pp. Ill. Maps. $115.00. (Paper: $29.95; E-book: $14.99.) International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-07-22 Mary Dewhurst Lewis
ist advancements, by marginalizing them from discussions and negotiations pertaining to regional agendas and forward-looking policies. Thus, the author calls for a non-state actorbased pan-Africanism that builds on the well-being and social justice and the most socially deprived: “At the end of the day, the uniting decolonial ideology for pan-Africanismmust be anti-imperialist, anti-patriarchal and
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Sylvia Tamale. Decolonization and Afro-Feminism. Daraja Press, Ottawa 2020. xv, 411 pp. Ill. Cad. $40.00. (E-book: Cad. $10.00) International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-07-22 Pamela Ohene-Nyako
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Ariadne Schmidt. Prosecuting Women. A Comparative Perspective on Crime and Gender before the Dutch Criminal Courts, c.1600–1810. [Crime and City in History, Vol. 4.] Brill, Leiden 2020. 285 pp. Ill. € 105.00; $126.00. (E-book: € 105.00; $126.00.) International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-07-22 Jonas Roelens
vide an opportunity to reassess these categories from the ground up. By focusing on the continuities and disruptions of space, the book shows that war capitalism continued to suffuse industrial capitalism, and that merchant capitalism remained an important force throughout. It stands as an important reminder, accessible to readers beyond academia, of how the legacy of empire is materialized in the
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Anthony Carew. American Labour's Cold War Abroad. From Deep Freeze to Détente, 1945–1970. Athabasca University Press, Edmonton 2018. xviii, 510 pp. Ill. Can. $49.99. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-07-22 Victor Rabinovitch
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Laleh Khalili. Sinews of War and Trade. Shipping and Capitalism in the Arabian Peninsula. Verso, London [etc.] 2020. xvi, 352 pp. Ill. Maps. £20.00. (Paper: £11.99; E-book: £20.00.) International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-07-22 Marten Dondorp
ordinary people. The Philippine state is undoubtedly a source of oppression, exploitation, and political marginalization, but the flipside of any state–citizen relationship is that the state needs to make concessions to its citizens when forcefully pressured by them to do so. Since this dynamic is left out of Umali’s story, we hear little of the successful popular struggles in the Philippines for expanded
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Revisiting White Labourism: New Debates on Working-Class Whiteness in Twentieth-Century Southern Africa International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-07-14 Duncan Money, Danelle van Zyl-Hermann
This article is a contribution to and reassessment of the debate about the concept of ‘white labourism’ hosted in this journal in 2010. White labourism is a concept formulated by Jonathan Hyslop to describe an ideology combining an anti-capitalist critique with racial segregation that he argued was dominant in a transnational white working class in the British Empire in the early twentieth century
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Forging Polity in Times of International Class War: The Parliamentary Rhetoric on Labour in the First Polish Diet, 1919–1922 International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-06-04 Wiktor Marzec
This article examines the impact of internal and external pressures on the parliamentary debate concerning the place of the working class within a newly emerging polity. Based on machine-assisted distant reading and close hermeneutics of parliamentary session transcripts, I ask how the first diet of the modern Polish state (1919–1922) responded to labour militancy and war. My analysis demonstrates
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Becoming a Continent of Immigration: Charting Europe's Migration History, 1919–2019 International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-05-14 Irial Glynn
Widespread belief in economic liberalism in the second half of the nineteenth century, combined with the development of safer, faster, and cheaper transportation, paved the way for huge migration to occur. Between 1850 and 1914, 55 million people departed Europe, with the vast majority heading to the Americas during what Hatton and Williamson term “the age of mass migration”. According to McKeown,
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Does Exclusion Follow the Flag? Merchant Sailors and US Imperial Expansion, 1895–1906 International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-05-14 William D. Riddell
This paper examines how class conflict affected US imperial expansion between 1898 and 1906. It focuses on West-Coast-based white merchant sailors and relies on union publications, legislative records, and congressional testimony to reveal how domestic class conflict shaped the boundaries, both internally and externally, of the emerging US empire. The struggle of the sailors’ unions over these imperial
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Michael Goldfield. The Southern Key. Class, Race, and Radicalism in the 1930s and 1940s. Oxford University Press, New York [etc.] 2020. ix, 416 pp. £32.99. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Michael K. Honey
tions” (p. ). The author also makes a significant contribution by locating Posadas’s eccentricity in the broader context of the s and s, when both the possibility of nuclear apocalypse and interest in ufology and the space race were actually widespread. Gittlitz rightly points out that the peak of Posadas’s political influence “overlapped with the more ardent period of the space race” (p
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Francisco J. Romero Salvadó, ¿Quién mató a Eduardo Dato? Comedia política y tragedia social en España, 1892–1921. Editorial Comares. Granada 2020. xv + 444 pp. Ill. €33.00. - Francisco J. Romero Salvadó, Political Comedy and Social Tragedy: Spain, a Laboratory of Social Conflict, 1892–1921. Sussex Academic Press. Brighton 2020. xxiii + 340 pp. Ill. £34.95. International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Chris Ealham
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Introduction: Interpreting the Global Economy through Local Anger International Review of Social History (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-03-16 Leyla Dakhli, Vincent Bonnecase
During the 1980s and 1990s, violent events occurred in the streets of many African and Middle Eastern countries. Each event had its own logic and saw the intervention of actors with differing profiles. What they had in common was that they all took place in the context of the implementation of a neoliberal political economy. The anger these policies aroused was first expressed by people who were not