Dispossession and Party Formation in Broader Comparative Perspective

2021 ◽  
pp. 109-132
Author(s):  
Edwin F. Ackerman

This chapter shows that rather than emerging from a ready-formed cohesive industrial labor movement, these parties’ original constituency was the demoted artisan and peasantry in transition to be, but not yet, proletarianized. Second, in a related way, the chapter shows that the period of party emergence followed a process of economic and political dispossession: these parties articulated new political subjectivities in the context of eroding traditional economic and political structures. The differences in the timing of party emergence between the countries lie precisely in how these processes of dispossession developed: in Germany, the process of economic dispossession coincided with a political dispossession setting the terrain for the mass-party form, while in the British case, economic dispossession was not initially accompanied by political dispossession of the working classes, who maintained a degree of self-presentational authority, particularly in the form of “friendly societies.”

Author(s):  
Michael K. Rosenow

This chapter examines how workers used the rituals of death to interpret, accommodate, and resist their living and working conditions during the period 1873–1913. It first traces the history of the American cemetery, and especially its rise as a cultural institution, before turning to Chicago's cemeteries as social and cultural spaces on the city's landscape. It then discusses how broader tensions in industrial society were reflected in the processes of death and burial. It also looks at the ways that Chicago's working classes turned to cemeteries to extend the terrain of contemplating the consequences of industrialization; the importance of religion, ethnicity, and race in the establishment and use of Chicago's cemeteries; and how Waldheim Cemetery became a space that linked anarchism, the labor movement, and radicalism in Chicago to similar movements across the globe. Finally, the chapter cites the case of the Haymarket memorial in Waldheim to show how the meanings of life and death came to be expressed in Chicago's cemeteries as the nation marched into the twentieth century.


Author(s):  
Samuel Brown

The Friendly Societies, which are sometimes called Benefit Clubs, have for many hundred years been highly popular in England; not merely because they supplied one of the principal wants of the working classes—namely, relief in sickness or accidents which disable them from obtaining their usual wages—but because, by mutual association, they afforded some scope for the talents and sagacity of some of the members to be recognised and appreciated by others. But by the very nature of their composition they were deficient in the element of stability ; and notwithstanding the best intentions of the members, the Societies have been constantly broken up and reformed.


Author(s):  
Esen Kirdiş

This chapter analyses the socio-political structures of Morocco, Turkey, and Jordan comparatively. It looks at the costs and benefits of party formation versus eschewing party politics. In doing so, it presents three strategic tradeoffs Islamic movements face while deciding to participate in party politics.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (84) ◽  
pp. 49-64
Author(s):  
Magnus Nilsson

This article analyses one of the most prominent motifs in Swedish working-class writer Stig Sjödin’s (1917-1993) poetry, namely that of work. The main argument is that Sjödin’s attitudes toward work were conditioned both by his Marxist world-view and by the different audiences for which he was writing. The poetry that he published in the labor-movement press aimed at creating class consciousness among workers and presented work both as something marked by oppression and injustice and as a source of pride. In his poetry collections, he presented industrial labor to an audience of non-workers with the aim of making them aware of the plight of the working class. Here, work was presented in a more univocally negative way than in the poetry printed in the labor-movement press.


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