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An innovative reading of the social history of Brazil using the "politics of the precariat" as an analytical vector.
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An innovative reading of the social history of Brazil using the "politics of the precariat" as an analytical vector.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 292
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 408g
- ISBN-13: 9781642590555
- ISBN-10: 164259055X
- Artikelnr.: 55174504
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 292
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 408g
- ISBN-13: 9781642590555
- ISBN-10: 164259055X
- Artikelnr.: 55174504
Ruy Braga, Ph.D. (2002), University of Campinas, is professor in the Sociology Department at the University of São Paulo. He has published many books and articles on Brazil, including Hegemonia às avessas (Boitempo Editorial, 2010), along with Francisco de Oliveira, as well as Infoproletários (Boitempo Editorial, 2009), along with Ricardo Antunes.
Table of Contents
Preface
Michael Löwy
List of Tables and Figures
Introduction
Part 1 The Formation of the Reversal
1 The Spectre of the People
The Sociology of Modernisation Encounters the Working Class
Unions in Peripheral Fordism
Populism and the Migrant Precariat
Between the Archaic and the Modern: An Ethnography of the Precariat
Working-Class Archaeology: Populism in Reverse
From Fordist Mirage to the Politics of the Precariat
Final Considerations
2 The Fatalism of the Weak
Sociology of Applied Work: The Limits of Bureaucratic Unionism
Public Sociology of Work: Towards Working-Class Independence
The Precarious Hegemony of Peripheral Fordism
From Populism to Social Discontent (and Vice-versa)
Critical Sociology of Work: Discontent as Disalienation
For a Sociology of Working-Class Discontent
Final Considerations
Part 2 The Transformation of Hegemony in Reverse
3 The Smile of the Exploited
Work and Politics in São Bernardo
The Despotic Factory Regime and the Metalworker Precariat
Peons 1: From Contingent Consciousness to Necessary Consciousness
Peons 2: From the Union Bureaucracy to the Metalworker Vanguard
Peons 3: From Rank-and-File Rebellion to Strike Waves
Precarious Hegemony: The Return of Bureaucratic Power?
Final Considerations
4 The Anguish of the Subalterns
Post-Fordism and the Neoliberal Company
A Peripheral and Post-Fordist Precariat
Discontent and Consent in the Call-Centre Industry
Unionism in the Telemarketing Sector
Lulista Hegemony: Between Social Discontent and Active Will
Telemarketers: The Reverse of the Reverse
Final Considerations
Conclusion: "Let's Play That?"
Interventions
1 Dilma and the Brazilian Utopia
2 Unrest in the Kitchen
3 Chronicle of an Unforgettable Month
4 For a Sociology Worthy of June
5 Rosa Parks in Itaquera
6 The Most Visible Colour
7 Challenging Hegemony
8 The Era of Pillage
9 The End of Lulism and the Palace Coup in Brazil
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Michael Löwy
List of Tables and Figures
Introduction
Part 1 The Formation of the Reversal
1 The Spectre of the People
The Sociology of Modernisation Encounters the Working Class
Unions in Peripheral Fordism
Populism and the Migrant Precariat
Between the Archaic and the Modern: An Ethnography of the Precariat
Working-Class Archaeology: Populism in Reverse
From Fordist Mirage to the Politics of the Precariat
Final Considerations
2 The Fatalism of the Weak
Sociology of Applied Work: The Limits of Bureaucratic Unionism
Public Sociology of Work: Towards Working-Class Independence
The Precarious Hegemony of Peripheral Fordism
From Populism to Social Discontent (and Vice-versa)
Critical Sociology of Work: Discontent as Disalienation
For a Sociology of Working-Class Discontent
Final Considerations
Part 2 The Transformation of Hegemony in Reverse
3 The Smile of the Exploited
Work and Politics in São Bernardo
The Despotic Factory Regime and the Metalworker Precariat
Peons 1: From Contingent Consciousness to Necessary Consciousness
Peons 2: From the Union Bureaucracy to the Metalworker Vanguard
Peons 3: From Rank-and-File Rebellion to Strike Waves
Precarious Hegemony: The Return of Bureaucratic Power?
Final Considerations
4 The Anguish of the Subalterns
Post-Fordism and the Neoliberal Company
A Peripheral and Post-Fordist Precariat
Discontent and Consent in the Call-Centre Industry
Unionism in the Telemarketing Sector
Lulista Hegemony: Between Social Discontent and Active Will
Telemarketers: The Reverse of the Reverse
Final Considerations
Conclusion: "Let's Play That?"
Interventions
1 Dilma and the Brazilian Utopia
2 Unrest in the Kitchen
3 Chronicle of an Unforgettable Month
4 For a Sociology Worthy of June
5 Rosa Parks in Itaquera
6 The Most Visible Colour
7 Challenging Hegemony
8 The Era of Pillage
9 The End of Lulism and the Palace Coup in Brazil
Bibliography
Index
Table of Contents
Preface
Michael Löwy
List of Tables and Figures
Introduction
Part 1 The Formation of the Reversal
1 The Spectre of the People
The Sociology of Modernisation Encounters the Working Class
Unions in Peripheral Fordism
Populism and the Migrant Precariat
Between the Archaic and the Modern: An Ethnography of the Precariat
Working-Class Archaeology: Populism in Reverse
From Fordist Mirage to the Politics of the Precariat
Final Considerations
2 The Fatalism of the Weak
Sociology of Applied Work: The Limits of Bureaucratic Unionism
Public Sociology of Work: Towards Working-Class Independence
The Precarious Hegemony of Peripheral Fordism
From Populism to Social Discontent (and Vice-versa)
Critical Sociology of Work: Discontent as Disalienation
For a Sociology of Working-Class Discontent
Final Considerations
Part 2 The Transformation of Hegemony in Reverse
3 The Smile of the Exploited
Work and Politics in São Bernardo
The Despotic Factory Regime and the Metalworker Precariat
Peons 1: From Contingent Consciousness to Necessary Consciousness
Peons 2: From the Union Bureaucracy to the Metalworker Vanguard
Peons 3: From Rank-and-File Rebellion to Strike Waves
Precarious Hegemony: The Return of Bureaucratic Power?
Final Considerations
4 The Anguish of the Subalterns
Post-Fordism and the Neoliberal Company
A Peripheral and Post-Fordist Precariat
Discontent and Consent in the Call-Centre Industry
Unionism in the Telemarketing Sector
Lulista Hegemony: Between Social Discontent and Active Will
Telemarketers: The Reverse of the Reverse
Final Considerations
Conclusion: "Let's Play That?"
Interventions
1 Dilma and the Brazilian Utopia
2 Unrest in the Kitchen
3 Chronicle of an Unforgettable Month
4 For a Sociology Worthy of June
5 Rosa Parks in Itaquera
6 The Most Visible Colour
7 Challenging Hegemony
8 The Era of Pillage
9 The End of Lulism and the Palace Coup in Brazil
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Michael Löwy
List of Tables and Figures
Introduction
Part 1 The Formation of the Reversal
1 The Spectre of the People
The Sociology of Modernisation Encounters the Working Class
Unions in Peripheral Fordism
Populism and the Migrant Precariat
Between the Archaic and the Modern: An Ethnography of the Precariat
Working-Class Archaeology: Populism in Reverse
From Fordist Mirage to the Politics of the Precariat
Final Considerations
2 The Fatalism of the Weak
Sociology of Applied Work: The Limits of Bureaucratic Unionism
Public Sociology of Work: Towards Working-Class Independence
The Precarious Hegemony of Peripheral Fordism
From Populism to Social Discontent (and Vice-versa)
Critical Sociology of Work: Discontent as Disalienation
For a Sociology of Working-Class Discontent
Final Considerations
Part 2 The Transformation of Hegemony in Reverse
3 The Smile of the Exploited
Work and Politics in São Bernardo
The Despotic Factory Regime and the Metalworker Precariat
Peons 1: From Contingent Consciousness to Necessary Consciousness
Peons 2: From the Union Bureaucracy to the Metalworker Vanguard
Peons 3: From Rank-and-File Rebellion to Strike Waves
Precarious Hegemony: The Return of Bureaucratic Power?
Final Considerations
4 The Anguish of the Subalterns
Post-Fordism and the Neoliberal Company
A Peripheral and Post-Fordist Precariat
Discontent and Consent in the Call-Centre Industry
Unionism in the Telemarketing Sector
Lulista Hegemony: Between Social Discontent and Active Will
Telemarketers: The Reverse of the Reverse
Final Considerations
Conclusion: "Let's Play That?"
Interventions
1 Dilma and the Brazilian Utopia
2 Unrest in the Kitchen
3 Chronicle of an Unforgettable Month
4 For a Sociology Worthy of June
5 Rosa Parks in Itaquera
6 The Most Visible Colour
7 Challenging Hegemony
8 The Era of Pillage
9 The End of Lulism and the Palace Coup in Brazil
Bibliography
Index