ABSTRACT

Classes of Labour: Work and Life in a Central Indian Steel Town is a classic in the social sciences. The rigour and richness of the ethnographic data of this book and its analysis is matched only by its literary style. This magnum opus of 732 pages, an outcome of fieldwork covering twenty-one years, complete with diagrams and photographs, reads like an epic novel, difficult to put down. Professor Jonathan Parry looks at a context in which the manual workforce is divided into distinct social classes, which have a clear sense of themselves as separate and interests that are sometimes opposed. The relationship between them may even be one of exploitation; and they are associated with different lifestyles and outlooks, kinship and marriage practices, and suicide patterns. A central concern is with the intersection between class, caste, gender and regional ethnicity, with how class trumps caste in most contexts and with how classes have become increasingly structured as the ‘structuration’ of castes has declined. The wider theoretical ambition is to specify the general conditions under which the so-called ‘working class’ has any realistic prospect of unity.

part 1|159 pages

Context

chapter 1|36 pages

Introduction

A Symbol and a Portent

chapter 2|37 pages

Classes of Labour

chapter 3|44 pages

Building Bhilai

chapter 4|40 pages

The Price of Modernity

part 2|241 pages

Work

chapter 5|65 pages

A Post in the Plant

chapter 6|72 pages

The Work Situation of BSP Labour

chapter 7|58 pages

Private Sector Industry

part 3|204 pages

Life

chapter 9|72 pages

Caste and Class in the Neighbourhood

chapter 10|35 pages

Growing Up; Growing Apart

chapter 11|64 pages

Marriage and Remarriage

chapter 12|31 pages

Self-inflicted Death

part 4|62 pages

Concluding

chapter 13|60 pages

Focusing and Expanding the Lens