Art/Commons: anthropology beyond capitalism
In: In common
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In: In common
In: London School of Economics monographs in social anthropology 78
In: The journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Band 13, Heft 4, S. 1025-1026
ISSN: 1467-9655
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 108, Heft 3, S. 616-617
ISSN: 1548-1433
Petty Capitalists and Globalization: Flexibility, Entrepreneurship, and Economic Development. Alan Smart and Josephine Smart, eds. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2005. 317 pp.
In: The journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Band 11, Heft 3, S. 527-548
ISSN: 1467-9655
This article explores the experience of formal and informal steel labour in the contexts of the factory, the family, and the neighbourhood in 'Endcliffe', an ex‐industrial district of Sheffield, UK. The article reiterates Claude Meillassoux's claim, in his book Maidens, meal and money, that the informal economy is an ideological space for the cheap reproduction of labour in the interests of capital. Nevertheless, it also examines subjective and ethnographic understandings of the meanings of 'capital' and 'labour' and of the political nature of their shifting boundaries. In Endcliffe, capitalist subcontracting, state welfare, and economic policies of local regeneration have increased the informalization and casualization of steel labour and blurred the social spaces of the factory, the family, and the neighbourhood. The increased permeability between formal and informal economic processes and the re‐embeddedness of production in the social and political texture of the neighbourhood tangles idioms of kinship and capitalist ideologies of production and turns the structural conflict between 'capital' and 'labour' into a generational and gender conflict within the working class. The article shows that the 'New Labour' government's attempt to transform Britain into a post‐industrial and classless society has paradoxically fostered the re‐emergence of ancient modes of production and forms of bonded labour.
In: Dislocations volume 27
In: Dislocations 24
The past decades have seen significant urban insurrections worldwide, and this volume analyzes some of them from an anthropological perspective; it argues that transformations of urban class relationships must be approached in a way that is both globally informed and deeply embedded in local and popular histories, and contends that every case of urban mobilization should be understood against its precise context in the global capitalist transformation. The book examines cases of mobilization across the globe, and employs a Marxian class framework, open to the diverse and multi-scalar dynamics of urban politics, especially struggles for spatial justice