Bernardi, Claudia; Müller, Viola; Stojić, Biljana; Vilhelmsson, Vilhelm (Ed.)
Moving Workers: Historical Perspectives on Labour, Coercion and Im/Mobilities Collection
De Gruyter, 2023.
@collection{nokey,
title = {Moving Workers: Historical Perspectives on Labour, Coercion and Im/Mobilities},
editor = {Claudia Bernardi and Viola Müller and Biljana Stojić and Vilhelm Vilhelmsson },
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-10-01},
publisher = {De Gruyter},
abstract = {This book explores how workers moved and were moved, why they moved, and how they were kept from moving. Combining global labour history with mobility studies, it investigates moving workers through the lens of coercion. The contributions in this book are based on extensive archival research and span Europe and North America over the past 500 years. They provide fresh historical perspectives on the various regimes of coercion, mobility, and immobility as constituent parts of the political economy of labour. Moving Workers shows that all struggles relating to the mobility of workers or its restriction have the potential to reveal complex configurations of hierarchies, dependencies, and diverging conceptions of work and labour relations that continuously make and remake our world. },
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Schiel, Juliane; Chevaleyre, Claude
Work Semantics. In Search of an Alternative Conceptual Matrix for Labour and Social Historians Journal Article
In: Austrian Journal of Historical Studies, vol. 34, iss. 2, pp. 9-17, 2023.
@article{nokey,
title = {Work Semantics. In Search of an Alternative Conceptual Matrix for Labour and Social Historians },
author = {Juliane Schiel and Claude Chevaleyre},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
issuetitle = {Work Semantics / Semantiken der Arbeit},
journal = {Austrian Journal of Historical Studies},
volume = {34},
issue = {2},
pages = {9-17},
abstract = {The idea for the project presented in this volume began with an encounter and a discovery. When we – a medievalist and a sinologist – first met in autumn 2017, we realised that although we came from different disciplines and worked on different regions and time periods, we were struggling with the same problem: As historians working on slaving practices in the Venetian empire (14th–16th centuries) respectively servitude in late imperial China (15th–19th centuries), we were both spending much of our time explaining the contextual differences and similarities between the social configurations we were studying to the broader community of social, labour, and global historians. We both felt that our objects of study did not fit well within the much-debated subfield of “free and unfree labour”, and that the postcolonial critiques and the so-called global turn in history did not solve the conceptual problem we were facing. Integrating a medieval or Chinese case study into a conference panel or a special journal issue on household service or slavery helped to enlarge the horizon of the historiographical debates on the history of unfree labour relations, but the umbrella terms of these subfields of study and the limited conceptual references
available did little to help us understand and properly convey the social taxonomies shaping the power relations we were studying.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
available did little to help us understand and properly convey the social taxonomies shaping the power relations we were studying.
Pargas, Damian Alan; Schiel, Juliane (Ed.)
The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery throughout History Book
2023.
@book{nokey,
title = { The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery throughout History },
editor = {Damian Alan Pargas and Juliane Schiel},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-06-15},
abstract = {This open access handbook takes a comparative and global approach to analyse the practice of slavery throughout history. To understand slavery – why it developed, and how it functioned in various societies – is to understand an important and widespread practice in world civilisations. With research traditionally being dominated by the Atlantic world, this collection aims to illuminate slavery that existed in not only the Americas but also ancient, medieval, North and sub-Saharan African, Near Eastern, and Asian societies. Connecting civilisations through migration, warfare, trade routes and economic expansion, the practice of slavery integrated countries and regions through power-based relationships, whilst simultaneously dividing societies by class, race, ethnicity and cultural group. Uncovering slavery as a globalising phenomenon, the authors highlight the slave-trading routes that crisscrossed Africa, helped integrate the Mediterranean world, connected Indian Ocean societies and fused the Atlantic world. Split into five parts, the handbook portrays the evolution of slavery from antiquity to the contemporary era and encourages readers to realise similarities and differences between various manifestations of slavery throughout history. Providing a truly global coverage of slavery, and including thematic injections within each chronological part, this handbook is a comprehensive and transnational resource for all researchers interested in slavery, the history of labour, and anthropology.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {book}
}
Bernardi, Claudia; Müller, Viola; Stojić, Biljana; Vilhelmsson, Vilhelm
Introduction: Moving Workers in History Book Chapter
In: Bernardi, Claudia; Müller, Viola; Stojić, Biljana; Vilhelmsson, Vilhelm (Ed.): Moving Workers: Historical Perspectives on Labour, Coercion and Im/Mobilities, 2023.
@inbook{nokey,
title = {Introduction: Moving Workers in History},
author = {Claudia Bernardi and Viola Müller and Biljana Stojić and Vilhelm Vilhelmsson},
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year = {2023},
date = {2023-01-01},
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Papastefanaki, Leda; Kabadayı, M. Erdem (Ed.)
Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940 Collection
2022.
@collection{nokey,
title = {Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940},
editor = {Leda Papastefanaki and M. Erdem Kabadayı},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
series = {International Studies in Social History},
abstract = {As was the case in many other countries, it was only in the early years of this century that Greek and Turkish labour historians began to systematically look beyond national borders to investigate their intricately interrelated histories. The studies in Working in Greece and Turkey provide an overdue exploration of labour history on both sides of the Aegean, before as well as after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Deploying the approaches of global labour history as a framework, this volume presents transnational, transcontinental,
and diachronic comparisons that illuminate the shared history of Greece and Turkey.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {collection}
}
and diachronic comparisons that illuminate the shared history of Greece and Turkey.
Chevaleyre, Claude
Beyond Maritime Asia. Ideology, Historiography, and Prospects for a Global History of Slavery in Early-Modern Asia Book Chapter
In: Kate Ekama,; Hellman, Lisa; van Rossum, Matthias (Ed.): In Slavery and Bondage in Asia, 1550-1850, 2022.
@inbook{nokey,
title = {Beyond Maritime Asia. Ideology, Historiography, and Prospects for a Global History of Slavery in Early-Modern Asia},
author = {Claude Chevaleyre},
editor = {Kate Ekama, and Lisa Hellman and Matthias van Rossum},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
urldate = {2022-01-01},
booktitle = {In Slavery and Bondage in Asia, 1550-1850},
keywords = {},
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Chevaleyre, Claude
Insiders by Analogy: Slaves in the Great Ming Code Journal Article
In: Slavery & Abolition, vol. 43, iss. 3, pp. 460-481 , 2022.
@article{nokey,
title = {Insiders by Analogy: Slaves in the Great Ming Code},
author = {Claude Chevaleyre},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
journal = {Slavery & Abolition},
volume = {43},
issue = {3},
pages = {460-481 },
abstract = {This article seeks to reinforce arguments that a genuinely global history of slavery is possible only if we examine the nature and dynamics of chattel and bonded status in parts of the world that have been largely ignored in slavery studies. Although scholars have begun to reassess the dynamics of slavery in early-modern Asia, a comprehensive study of slaving practices in China remains to be written. A careful examination of the provisions on ‘slaves’ (nubi) included in the Great Ming Code (1397) provides an opportunity to better understand slave status in Ming (1368–1644) China. Despite their limits, the norms and concepts subsumed in the legislation can tell us a great deal about the relative nature of social status and changes in slave status through time. This article seeks to explain how and why slaves were conceptualized as such in the late imperial period. It distinguishes between two categories of social interaction (that which slaves had with society and that which they had with their master’s family) and dissects the analogy between slaves and children in these interactions. It argues that the features that historians usually regard as distinctive of nubi slavery cannot be properly understood without adequate contextualization.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Heinsen, Johan
Penal Slavery in Early Modern Scandinavia Journal Article
In: Journal of Global Slavery, vol. 6, iss. 3, pp. 343–368, 2021.
@article{nokey,
title = {Penal Slavery in Early Modern Scandinavia},
author = {Johan Heinsen},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
journal = {Journal of Global Slavery},
volume = {6},
issue = {3},
pages = {343–368},
abstract = {In Scandinavia, a penal institution known as “slavery” existed from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries. Penal slaves laboured in the creation and maintenance of military infrastructure. They were chained and often stigmatized, sometimes by branding. Their punishment was likened and, on a few occasions, linked to Atlantic slavery. Still, in reality, it was a wholly distinct form of enslavement that produced different experiences of coercion than those of the Atlantic. Such forms of penal slavery sit uneasily in historiographies of punishment but also offers a challenge for the dominant models of global labour history and its attempts to create comparative frameworks for coerced labour. This article argues for the need for contextual approaches to what such coercion meant to both coercers and coerced. Therefore, it offers an analysis of the meaning of early modern penal slavery based on an exceptional set of sources from 1723. In these sources, the status of the punished was negotiated and practiced by guards and slaves themselves. Court appearances by slaves were usually brief—typically revolving around escapes as authorities attempted to identify security breaches. The documents explored in this article are different: They present multiple voices speaking at length, negotiating their very status as voices. From that negotiation and its failures emerge a set of practiced meanings of penal “slavery” in eighteenth-century Copenhagen tied to competing yet intertwined notions of dishonour.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Papastefanaki, Leda; Kabadayı, Erdem M. (Ed.)
Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940 Bachelor Thesis
2020.
@bachelorthesis{nokey,
title = {Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940},
editor = {Leda Papastefanaki and Erdem M. Kabadayı},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
abstract = {As was the case in many other countries, it was only in the early years of this century that Greek and Turkish labour historians began to systematically look beyond national borders to investigate their intricately interrelated histories. The 14 studies in “Working in Greece and Turkey” provide an overdue exploration of labour history on both sides of the Aegean, before as well as after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Deploying the approaches of global labour history as a framework, this volume presents transnational, transcontinental, and diachronic comparisons that illuminate the shared history of Greece and Turkey.
},
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pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {bachelorthesis}
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Barragán, Rossana Romano; Papastefanaki, Leda
Women and Gender in the Mines: Challenging Masculinity Through History: An Introduction Journal Article
In: International Review of Social History , vol. 65, iss. 2, pp. 191-231, 2020.
@article{nokey,
title = {Women and Gender in the Mines: Challenging Masculinity Through History: An Introduction},
author = {Rossana Romano Barragán and Leda Papastefanaki},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
journal = {International Review of Social History },
volume = {65},
issue = {2},
pages = {191-231},
abstract = {The role of women as mineworkers and as household workers has been erased. Here, we challenge the masculinity associated with the mines, taking a longer-term and a global labour history perspective. We foreground the importance of women as mineworkers in different parts of the world since the early modern period and analyse the changes introduced in coal mining in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, the masculinization and mechanization, and the growing importance of women in contemporary artisanal and small-scale mining. The effect of protective laws and the exclusion of women from underground tasks was to restrict women’s work more to the household, which played a pivotal role in mining communities but is insufficiently recognized. This process of “de-labourization” of women’s work was closely connected with the distinction between productive and unproductive labour. This introductory article therefore centres on the important work carried out in the household by women and children. Finally, we present the three articles in the Special Theme in International Review of Social History and discuss how each of them is in dialogue with the topics addressed here.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Schiel, Juliane; Vito, Christian De; van Rossum, Matthias
From Bondage to Precariousness? New Perspectives on Labor and Social History Journal Article
In: Journal of Social History, vol. 54, iss. 2, pp. 1-19, 2020.
@article{nokey,
title = {From Bondage to Precariousness? New Perspectives on Labor and Social History},
author = {Juliane Schiel and Christian De Vito and Matthias van Rossum},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
journal = {Journal of Social History},
volume = {54},
issue = {2},
pages = {1-19},
abstract = {This article explores the possibility of a new, empirically based analytical and methodological framework for the study of labour relations and the reinterpretation of contemporary issues, including precariousness, „modern slavery,” social inequality, and dependence. It proposes a contextualized, interrelational and transepochal approach and discusses the potential of three research strategies.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Rediker, Marcus; Chakraborty, Titas; van Rossum, Matthias (Ed.)
A Global History of Runaways: Workers, Mobility, and Capitalism 1600-1850 Collection
2019.
@collection{nokey,
title = {A Global History of Runaways: Workers, Mobility, and Capitalism 1600-1850},
editor = {Marcus Rediker and Titas Chakraborty and Matthias van Rossum},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
urldate = {2019-01-01},
abstract = {During global capitalism's long ascent from 1600–1850, workers of all kinds—slaves, indentured servants, convicts, domestic workers, soldiers, and sailors—repeatedly ran away from their masters and bosses, with profound effects. "A Global History of Runaways" compares and connects runaways in the British, Danish, Dutch, French, Mughal, Portuguese, and American empires. Together these essays show how capitalism required vast numbers of mobile workers who would build the foundations of a new economic order. At the same time, these laborers challenged that order—from the undermining of Danish colonization in the seventeenth century to the igniting of civil war in the United States in the nineteenth.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {collection}
}
Valuch, Tibor
The World of Labor and Workers in Modern East-Central Europe: Introduction to the Thematic Issue Journal Article
In: East Central Europe, vol. 46, pp. 1-8, 2019.
@article{nokey,
title = {The World of Labor and Workers in Modern East-Central Europe: Introduction to the Thematic Issue},
author = {Tibor Valuch},
editor = {Tibor Valuch},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
issuetitle = {Workers, Labor and Labor History in Modern East Central Europe},
journal = {East Central Europe},
volume = {46},
pages = {1-8},
abstract = {In this special issue we are going to focus on answering the following questions: Why is East-Central European labor history peculiar or special? How and why has the situation of labor history been changing during the last decades? What is the relation between global labor history and ece labor history? What kind of gaps are there in the research and what are the most important Research trends?
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Jarska, Natalia
The Periphery Revisited: Polish Post-war Historiography on the Working Class and the New Global Labour History Journal Article
In: European Review of History, vol. 25, iss. 1, pp. 45-60, 2018.
@article{nokey,
title = {The Periphery Revisited: Polish Post-war Historiography on the Working Class and the New Global Labour History},
author = {Natalia Jarska},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-01-01},
urldate = {2018-01-01},
journal = {European Review of History},
volume = {25},
issue = {1},
pages = {45-60},
abstract = {After 1945, Polish historiography was circumscribed by political and ideological considerations; however – except during the brief Stalinist period (1951–56) – Marxist methodology was not imposed or applied uncritically. In fact, discussions about the role of the working class in history that began after 1956 generated research interest in new groups of workers and labour relations. Much of this research concerns recently highlighted aspects of labour history, such as marginal groups of workers or free versus unfree labour.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Bernet, Brigitta; Schiel, Juliane; Tanner, Jakob (Ed.)
Arbeit in der Erweiterung Collection
2016.
@collection{nokey,
title = {Arbeit in der Erweiterung},
editor = {Brigitta Bernet and Juliane Schiel and Jakob Tanner},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-01-01},
urldate = {2016-01-01},
booktitle = {Historische Anthropologie},
volume = {24},
issue = {2},
abstract = {Heute ist das, was wir unter Arbeit verstehen, in Bewegung geraten. Die Lohnarbeit, die sich mit der Industrialisierung durchgesetzt hat, wird durch neue Formen des Arbeitens verdrängt. Zunehmend lösen sich die vertraglich abgesicherte "Normalarbeit" und deren betriebszentrierte Organisation auf. Eingespielte Definitionen von Arbeit werden porös - auch in der Geschichtswissenschaft. Fünf Fallstudien und drei methodisch-konzeptionelle Reflexionen lenken in diesem Heft den Blick auf die vielfältigen Formen und Deutungen von Arbeit jenseits des westlichen Industriebetriebs: "vormoderne" Organisationsformen, transnationale Verflechtungen, globale Produktionsregimes und koloniale Imaginarien.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {collection}
}
Hofmeester, Karin; Lucassen, Jan; da Silva, Filipa Ribeiro
No Global history without Africa: Reciprocal Comparison and Beyond Journal Article
In: History in Africa. A Journal of Method, iss. 41, pp. 249-276, 2014.
@article{nokey,
title = {No Global history without Africa: Reciprocal Comparison and Beyond},
author = {Karin Hofmeester and Jan Lucassen and Filipa Ribeiro da Silva},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-01-01},
urldate = {2014-01-01},
journal = {History in Africa. A Journal of Method},
issue = {41},
pages = {249-276},
abstract = {This introduction explains why it is important to include the history of labor and labor relations in Africa in Global Labor History. It suggests that the approach of the Global Collaboratory on the History of Labour Relations 1500–2000 – with its taxonomy of labour relations – is a feasible method for applying this approach to the historiography on labor history in Africa.
},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
2023
Bernardi, Claudia; Müller, Viola; Stojić, Biljana; Vilhelmsson, Vilhelm (Ed.)
Moving Workers: Historical Perspectives on Labour, Coercion and Im/Mobilities Collection
De Gruyter, 2023.
Abstract | Tags: global labour history, longue duree, migration and mobility
@collection{nokey,
title = {Moving Workers: Historical Perspectives on Labour, Coercion and Im/Mobilities},
editor = {Claudia Bernardi and Viola Müller and Biljana Stojić and Vilhelm Vilhelmsson },
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-10-01},
publisher = {De Gruyter},
abstract = {This book explores how workers moved and were moved, why they moved, and how they were kept from moving. Combining global labour history with mobility studies, it investigates moving workers through the lens of coercion. The contributions in this book are based on extensive archival research and span Europe and North America over the past 500 years. They provide fresh historical perspectives on the various regimes of coercion, mobility, and immobility as constituent parts of the political economy of labour. Moving Workers shows that all struggles relating to the mobility of workers or its restriction have the potential to reveal complex configurations of hierarchies, dependencies, and diverging conceptions of work and labour relations that continuously make and remake our world. },
keywords = {global labour history, longue duree, migration and mobility},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {collection}
}
Schiel, Juliane; Chevaleyre, Claude
Work Semantics. In Search of an Alternative Conceptual Matrix for Labour and Social Historians Journal Article
In: Austrian Journal of Historical Studies, vol. 34, iss. 2, pp. 9-17, 2023.
Abstract | Tags: global labour history, historical semantics, historiography, methodology
@article{nokey,
title = {Work Semantics. In Search of an Alternative Conceptual Matrix for Labour and Social Historians },
author = {Juliane Schiel and Claude Chevaleyre},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
issuetitle = {Work Semantics / Semantiken der Arbeit},
journal = {Austrian Journal of Historical Studies},
volume = {34},
issue = {2},
pages = {9-17},
abstract = {The idea for the project presented in this volume began with an encounter and a discovery. When we – a medievalist and a sinologist – first met in autumn 2017, we realised that although we came from different disciplines and worked on different regions and time periods, we were struggling with the same problem: As historians working on slaving practices in the Venetian empire (14th–16th centuries) respectively servitude in late imperial China (15th–19th centuries), we were both spending much of our time explaining the contextual differences and similarities between the social configurations we were studying to the broader community of social, labour, and global historians. We both felt that our objects of study did not fit well within the much-debated subfield of “free and unfree labour”, and that the postcolonial critiques and the so-called global turn in history did not solve the conceptual problem we were facing. Integrating a medieval or Chinese case study into a conference panel or a special journal issue on household service or slavery helped to enlarge the horizon of the historiographical debates on the history of unfree labour relations, but the umbrella terms of these subfields of study and the limited conceptual references
available did little to help us understand and properly convey the social taxonomies shaping the power relations we were studying.},
keywords = {global labour history, historical semantics, historiography, methodology},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
available did little to help us understand and properly convey the social taxonomies shaping the power relations we were studying.
Pargas, Damian Alan; Schiel, Juliane (Ed.)
The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery throughout History Book
2023.
Abstract | Tags: 19th century, 20th century, abolition, ancient history, contemporary, early modern history, global labour history, longue duree, medieval history, slavery
@book{nokey,
title = { The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery throughout History },
editor = {Damian Alan Pargas and Juliane Schiel},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-06-15},
abstract = {This open access handbook takes a comparative and global approach to analyse the practice of slavery throughout history. To understand slavery – why it developed, and how it functioned in various societies – is to understand an important and widespread practice in world civilisations. With research traditionally being dominated by the Atlantic world, this collection aims to illuminate slavery that existed in not only the Americas but also ancient, medieval, North and sub-Saharan African, Near Eastern, and Asian societies. Connecting civilisations through migration, warfare, trade routes and economic expansion, the practice of slavery integrated countries and regions through power-based relationships, whilst simultaneously dividing societies by class, race, ethnicity and cultural group. Uncovering slavery as a globalising phenomenon, the authors highlight the slave-trading routes that crisscrossed Africa, helped integrate the Mediterranean world, connected Indian Ocean societies and fused the Atlantic world. Split into five parts, the handbook portrays the evolution of slavery from antiquity to the contemporary era and encourages readers to realise similarities and differences between various manifestations of slavery throughout history. Providing a truly global coverage of slavery, and including thematic injections within each chronological part, this handbook is a comprehensive and transnational resource for all researchers interested in slavery, the history of labour, and anthropology.},
keywords = {19th century, 20th century, abolition, ancient history, contemporary, early modern history, global labour history, longue duree, medieval history, slavery},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {book}
}
Bernardi, Claudia; Müller, Viola; Stojić, Biljana; Vilhelmsson, Vilhelm
Introduction: Moving Workers in History Book Chapter
In: Bernardi, Claudia; Müller, Viola; Stojić, Biljana; Vilhelmsson, Vilhelm (Ed.): Moving Workers: Historical Perspectives on Labour, Coercion and Im/Mobilities, 2023.
Tags: global labour history, migration and mobility
@inbook{nokey,
title = {Introduction: Moving Workers in History},
author = {Claudia Bernardi and Viola Müller and Biljana Stojić and Vilhelm Vilhelmsson},
editor = {Claudia Bernardi and Viola Müller and Biljana Stojić and Vilhelm Vilhelmsson},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-01-01},
booktitle = {Moving Workers: Historical Perspectives on Labour, Coercion and Im/Mobilities},
keywords = {global labour history, migration and mobility},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inbook}
}
2022
Papastefanaki, Leda; Kabadayı, M. Erdem (Ed.)
Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940 Collection
2022.
Abstract | Tags: 19th century, 20th century, global labour history, greece, nation state, ottoman empire, turkey
@collection{nokey,
title = {Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940},
editor = {Leda Papastefanaki and M. Erdem Kabadayı},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
series = {International Studies in Social History},
abstract = {As was the case in many other countries, it was only in the early years of this century that Greek and Turkish labour historians began to systematically look beyond national borders to investigate their intricately interrelated histories. The studies in Working in Greece and Turkey provide an overdue exploration of labour history on both sides of the Aegean, before as well as after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Deploying the approaches of global labour history as a framework, this volume presents transnational, transcontinental,
and diachronic comparisons that illuminate the shared history of Greece and Turkey.
},
keywords = {19th century, 20th century, global labour history, greece, nation state, ottoman empire, turkey},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {collection}
}
and diachronic comparisons that illuminate the shared history of Greece and Turkey.
Chevaleyre, Claude
Beyond Maritime Asia. Ideology, Historiography, and Prospects for a Global History of Slavery in Early-Modern Asia Book Chapter
In: Kate Ekama,; Hellman, Lisa; van Rossum, Matthias (Ed.): In Slavery and Bondage in Asia, 1550-1850, 2022.
Tags: china, early modern history, global labour history, slavery
@inbook{nokey,
title = {Beyond Maritime Asia. Ideology, Historiography, and Prospects for a Global History of Slavery in Early-Modern Asia},
author = {Claude Chevaleyre},
editor = {Kate Ekama, and Lisa Hellman and Matthias van Rossum},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
urldate = {2022-01-01},
booktitle = {In Slavery and Bondage in Asia, 1550-1850},
keywords = {china, early modern history, global labour history, slavery},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inbook}
}
Chevaleyre, Claude
Insiders by Analogy: Slaves in the Great Ming Code Journal Article
In: Slavery & Abolition, vol. 43, iss. 3, pp. 460-481 , 2022.
Abstract | Tags: china, early modern history, global labour history, slavery
@article{nokey,
title = {Insiders by Analogy: Slaves in the Great Ming Code},
author = {Claude Chevaleyre},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
journal = {Slavery & Abolition},
volume = {43},
issue = {3},
pages = {460-481 },
abstract = {This article seeks to reinforce arguments that a genuinely global history of slavery is possible only if we examine the nature and dynamics of chattel and bonded status in parts of the world that have been largely ignored in slavery studies. Although scholars have begun to reassess the dynamics of slavery in early-modern Asia, a comprehensive study of slaving practices in China remains to be written. A careful examination of the provisions on ‘slaves’ (nubi) included in the Great Ming Code (1397) provides an opportunity to better understand slave status in Ming (1368–1644) China. Despite their limits, the norms and concepts subsumed in the legislation can tell us a great deal about the relative nature of social status and changes in slave status through time. This article seeks to explain how and why slaves were conceptualized as such in the late imperial period. It distinguishes between two categories of social interaction (that which slaves had with society and that which they had with their master’s family) and dissects the analogy between slaves and children in these interactions. It argues that the features that historians usually regard as distinctive of nubi slavery cannot be properly understood without adequate contextualization.
},
keywords = {china, early modern history, global labour history, slavery},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
2021
Heinsen, Johan
Penal Slavery in Early Modern Scandinavia Journal Article
In: Journal of Global Slavery, vol. 6, iss. 3, pp. 343–368, 2021.
Abstract | Tags: convict labour, early modern history, global labour history, punishment, scandinavia, slavery
@article{nokey,
title = {Penal Slavery in Early Modern Scandinavia},
author = {Johan Heinsen},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
journal = {Journal of Global Slavery},
volume = {6},
issue = {3},
pages = {343–368},
abstract = {In Scandinavia, a penal institution known as “slavery” existed from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries. Penal slaves laboured in the creation and maintenance of military infrastructure. They were chained and often stigmatized, sometimes by branding. Their punishment was likened and, on a few occasions, linked to Atlantic slavery. Still, in reality, it was a wholly distinct form of enslavement that produced different experiences of coercion than those of the Atlantic. Such forms of penal slavery sit uneasily in historiographies of punishment but also offers a challenge for the dominant models of global labour history and its attempts to create comparative frameworks for coerced labour. This article argues for the need for contextual approaches to what such coercion meant to both coercers and coerced. Therefore, it offers an analysis of the meaning of early modern penal slavery based on an exceptional set of sources from 1723. In these sources, the status of the punished was negotiated and practiced by guards and slaves themselves. Court appearances by slaves were usually brief—typically revolving around escapes as authorities attempted to identify security breaches. The documents explored in this article are different: They present multiple voices speaking at length, negotiating their very status as voices. From that negotiation and its failures emerge a set of practiced meanings of penal “slavery” in eighteenth-century Copenhagen tied to competing yet intertwined notions of dishonour.
},
keywords = {convict labour, early modern history, global labour history, punishment, scandinavia, slavery},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
2020
Papastefanaki, Leda; Kabadayı, Erdem M. (Ed.)
Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940 Bachelor Thesis
2020.
Abstract | Tags: 19th century, 20th century, global labour history, greece, ottoman empire, turkey
@bachelorthesis{nokey,
title = {Working in Greece and Turkey: A Comparative Labour History from Empires to Nation States, 1840–1940},
editor = {Leda Papastefanaki and Erdem M. Kabadayı},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
abstract = {As was the case in many other countries, it was only in the early years of this century that Greek and Turkish labour historians began to systematically look beyond national borders to investigate their intricately interrelated histories. The 14 studies in “Working in Greece and Turkey” provide an overdue exploration of labour history on both sides of the Aegean, before as well as after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Deploying the approaches of global labour history as a framework, this volume presents transnational, transcontinental, and diachronic comparisons that illuminate the shared history of Greece and Turkey.
},
keywords = {19th century, 20th century, global labour history, greece, ottoman empire, turkey},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {bachelorthesis}
}
Barragán, Rossana Romano; Papastefanaki, Leda
Women and Gender in the Mines: Challenging Masculinity Through History: An Introduction Journal Article
In: International Review of Social History , vol. 65, iss. 2, pp. 191-231, 2020.
Abstract | Tags: gender, global labour history, mining
@article{nokey,
title = {Women and Gender in the Mines: Challenging Masculinity Through History: An Introduction},
author = {Rossana Romano Barragán and Leda Papastefanaki},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
journal = {International Review of Social History },
volume = {65},
issue = {2},
pages = {191-231},
abstract = {The role of women as mineworkers and as household workers has been erased. Here, we challenge the masculinity associated with the mines, taking a longer-term and a global labour history perspective. We foreground the importance of women as mineworkers in different parts of the world since the early modern period and analyse the changes introduced in coal mining in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, the masculinization and mechanization, and the growing importance of women in contemporary artisanal and small-scale mining. The effect of protective laws and the exclusion of women from underground tasks was to restrict women’s work more to the household, which played a pivotal role in mining communities but is insufficiently recognized. This process of “de-labourization” of women’s work was closely connected with the distinction between productive and unproductive labour. This introductory article therefore centres on the important work carried out in the household by women and children. Finally, we present the three articles in the Special Theme in International Review of Social History and discuss how each of them is in dialogue with the topics addressed here.
},
keywords = {gender, global labour history, mining},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Schiel, Juliane; Vito, Christian De; van Rossum, Matthias
From Bondage to Precariousness? New Perspectives on Labor and Social History Journal Article
In: Journal of Social History, vol. 54, iss. 2, pp. 1-19, 2020.
Abstract | Tags: dependency, global labour history, historical semantics, methodology, new history of work
@article{nokey,
title = {From Bondage to Precariousness? New Perspectives on Labor and Social History},
author = {Juliane Schiel and Christian De Vito and Matthias van Rossum},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
journal = {Journal of Social History},
volume = {54},
issue = {2},
pages = {1-19},
abstract = {This article explores the possibility of a new, empirically based analytical and methodological framework for the study of labour relations and the reinterpretation of contemporary issues, including precariousness, „modern slavery,” social inequality, and dependence. It proposes a contextualized, interrelational and transepochal approach and discusses the potential of three research strategies.
},
keywords = {dependency, global labour history, historical semantics, methodology, new history of work},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
2019
Rediker, Marcus; Chakraborty, Titas; van Rossum, Matthias (Ed.)
A Global History of Runaways: Workers, Mobility, and Capitalism 1600-1850 Collection
2019.
Abstract | Tags: 19th century, capitalism, early modern history, global labour history, migration and mobility, runaways
@collection{nokey,
title = {A Global History of Runaways: Workers, Mobility, and Capitalism 1600-1850},
editor = {Marcus Rediker and Titas Chakraborty and Matthias van Rossum},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
urldate = {2019-01-01},
abstract = {During global capitalism's long ascent from 1600–1850, workers of all kinds—slaves, indentured servants, convicts, domestic workers, soldiers, and sailors—repeatedly ran away from their masters and bosses, with profound effects. "A Global History of Runaways" compares and connects runaways in the British, Danish, Dutch, French, Mughal, Portuguese, and American empires. Together these essays show how capitalism required vast numbers of mobile workers who would build the foundations of a new economic order. At the same time, these laborers challenged that order—from the undermining of Danish colonization in the seventeenth century to the igniting of civil war in the United States in the nineteenth.
},
keywords = {19th century, capitalism, early modern history, global labour history, migration and mobility, runaways},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {collection}
}
Valuch, Tibor
The World of Labor and Workers in Modern East-Central Europe: Introduction to the Thematic Issue Journal Article
In: East Central Europe, vol. 46, pp. 1-8, 2019.
Abstract | Tags: central and eastern europe, global labour history, historiography
@article{nokey,
title = {The World of Labor and Workers in Modern East-Central Europe: Introduction to the Thematic Issue},
author = {Tibor Valuch},
editor = {Tibor Valuch},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
issuetitle = {Workers, Labor and Labor History in Modern East Central Europe},
journal = {East Central Europe},
volume = {46},
pages = {1-8},
abstract = {In this special issue we are going to focus on answering the following questions: Why is East-Central European labor history peculiar or special? How and why has the situation of labor history been changing during the last decades? What is the relation between global labor history and ece labor history? What kind of gaps are there in the research and what are the most important Research trends?
},
keywords = {central and eastern europe, global labour history, historiography},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
2018
Jarska, Natalia
The Periphery Revisited: Polish Post-war Historiography on the Working Class and the New Global Labour History Journal Article
In: European Review of History, vol. 25, iss. 1, pp. 45-60, 2018.
Abstract | Tags: central and eastern europe, global labour history, historiography, poland, socialism, working class
@article{nokey,
title = {The Periphery Revisited: Polish Post-war Historiography on the Working Class and the New Global Labour History},
author = {Natalia Jarska},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-01-01},
urldate = {2018-01-01},
journal = {European Review of History},
volume = {25},
issue = {1},
pages = {45-60},
abstract = {After 1945, Polish historiography was circumscribed by political and ideological considerations; however – except during the brief Stalinist period (1951–56) – Marxist methodology was not imposed or applied uncritically. In fact, discussions about the role of the working class in history that began after 1956 generated research interest in new groups of workers and labour relations. Much of this research concerns recently highlighted aspects of labour history, such as marginal groups of workers or free versus unfree labour.
},
keywords = {central and eastern europe, global labour history, historiography, poland, socialism, working class},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
2016
Bernet, Brigitta; Schiel, Juliane; Tanner, Jakob (Ed.)
Arbeit in der Erweiterung Collection
2016.
Abstract | Tags: colonialism, fordism, global labour history, historical anthropology, methodology
@collection{nokey,
title = {Arbeit in der Erweiterung},
editor = {Brigitta Bernet and Juliane Schiel and Jakob Tanner},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-01-01},
urldate = {2016-01-01},
booktitle = {Historische Anthropologie},
volume = {24},
issue = {2},
abstract = {Heute ist das, was wir unter Arbeit verstehen, in Bewegung geraten. Die Lohnarbeit, die sich mit der Industrialisierung durchgesetzt hat, wird durch neue Formen des Arbeitens verdrängt. Zunehmend lösen sich die vertraglich abgesicherte "Normalarbeit" und deren betriebszentrierte Organisation auf. Eingespielte Definitionen von Arbeit werden porös - auch in der Geschichtswissenschaft. Fünf Fallstudien und drei methodisch-konzeptionelle Reflexionen lenken in diesem Heft den Blick auf die vielfältigen Formen und Deutungen von Arbeit jenseits des westlichen Industriebetriebs: "vormoderne" Organisationsformen, transnationale Verflechtungen, globale Produktionsregimes und koloniale Imaginarien.},
keywords = {colonialism, fordism, global labour history, historical anthropology, methodology},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {collection}
}
2014
Hofmeester, Karin; Lucassen, Jan; da Silva, Filipa Ribeiro
No Global history without Africa: Reciprocal Comparison and Beyond Journal Article
In: History in Africa. A Journal of Method, iss. 41, pp. 249-276, 2014.
Abstract | Tags: africa, global labour history, longue duree
@article{nokey,
title = {No Global history without Africa: Reciprocal Comparison and Beyond},
author = {Karin Hofmeester and Jan Lucassen and Filipa Ribeiro da Silva},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-01-01},
urldate = {2014-01-01},
journal = {History in Africa. A Journal of Method},
issue = {41},
pages = {249-276},
abstract = {This introduction explains why it is important to include the history of labor and labor relations in Africa in Global Labor History. It suggests that the approach of the Global Collaboratory on the History of Labour Relations 1500–2000 – with its taxonomy of labour relations – is a feasible method for applying this approach to the historiography on labor history in Africa.
},
keywords = {africa, global labour history, longue duree},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}