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About The Book
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In contemporary India work for wages has expanded substantially as a mode of subsistence while labor at the same time has suffered a dramatic depreciation as a political force and as a target of state policy. The six essays in this volume reconstruct this now marginalized political history of an age of labor from various angles using previously inaccessible police records rare autobiographical documents and other neglected material. They examine how political conflict militancy and trade union activism were rooted in the everyday lives of construction workers and artisans of untouchable tanners and sweepers of seafarers railway staff and factory laborers throughout the late colonial period. They analyze how transformed politics of caste intersected with the late colonial upsurge of labor politics. They reassess the complex relationships of nationalist mobilizations and labor movements of elite politicians and an emergent group of organic worker-intellectuals and proletarian militants. They provide meticulous reconstructions of how incidents of labor protest unfolded in Indias varied industrial spaces. They argue in sum for a reappraisal of Indian labor history as an eventful political history. The volume is rounded off by the political memoirs of Bashir Ahmed Bakhtiar tracing his metamorphosis from militant worker to trade union leader. The memoirs are made available in English for the first time.