ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of the Anthropology of Labor offers a cross-cultural examination of labor around the world and presents the breadth of a growing and vital subfield of anthropology.

As we enter a new crisis-ridden age, some laboring people are protected, while others face impoverishment and death, as they work in unsafe conditions, migrate to gain livelihoods, languish in the unwaged sector, and become targets of law enforcement. The contributions to this volume address questions surrounding the categorization and visibility of work, the relationship of labor to the state, and how divisions of labor map onto racial, gendered, sexual, and national inequalities. In addition to the emotional dimensions and subjectivities of labor, the book also examines how laborers can articulate common experiences and identities, build organizational forms, and claim power together.

Bringing together the work of an impressive group of international scholars, this Handbook is essential for anthropologists with an interest in labor and political economy, as well as useful for scholars and students in related fields such as sociology and geography.

part I|92 pages

Divisions of labor

chapter 1|14 pages

To have a life

Labor reproduction, value, and negative value

chapter 2|16 pages

The many workers of capitalism

chapter 3|11 pages

Labour, property and persons

Reflections from Papua New Guinea

part II|96 pages

Organizing, mobilizing, and resisting

chapter 8|12 pages

Labour organisation

‘Traditional’ trade unions and beyond

chapter 9|12 pages

Class analysis across the “Capitalist/Communist” divide

Practicing the anthropology of labor in Kerala and Cuba

chapter 11|12 pages

International unions as a sphere of working-class (re)organization

Anthropological insights into Latin American steel workers

chapter 13|11 pages

Factory takeovers for production under self-management

Three examples from Europe

chapter 14|14 pages

Laboring for whiteness

The rise of Trumpism and what that tells us about racial and gendered capitalism in the United States

part III|67 pages

Workplaces, non-places, and labor regimes

chapter 16|10 pages

Working the supply chain

Towards an anthropology of maritime logistics

chapter 17|12 pages

Space–time compression

The workplace regime of transnational capitalist agriculture in northern Mexico

chapter 18|11 pages

Tea in troubled times

Labour in Indian postcolonial plantations

chapter 19|9 pages

Two workplaces and a revolution

Labor in brick kilns and food factories in western lowland Nepal

part IV|75 pages

Migrant labor

chapter 22|12 pages

Border walls and passages

Effects on labor exploitation

chapter 24|10 pages

Contract migrant farmworkers in North America

“Free” to be “unfree”

chapter 26|14 pages

Going global

Philippine migrant encounters with mobile capital

chapter 27|10 pages

Social justice writing and photography

The reality check and beyond

part V|76 pages

Affect, values, and subjectivity of labor

chapter 28|13 pages

A strike to remember

Ethnographic reflections on the conditions of possibility for labor resistance in the US heartland

chapter 29|13 pages

‘We are supposed to be the middle class’

Intra-personal responsibilities, hierarchical development projects and union mobilisation on Zambia's Copperbelt

chapter 30|11 pages

Technologies of transformation

chapter 31|13 pages

Beyond birthing

The labor(s) of doulas and Black birth workers

chapter 33|13 pages

Unruly workers and laborless landscapes

The role of marginal places and redundant people in energy transitions