“An eight-hour day for women workers”: negotiating working time in the Bulgarian textile industry between international labour politics and the shop floor, 1890s to 1930s

Ivelina Masheva
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The article investigates the issue of the eight-hour workday and its application from the early 1890s – when it first appeared on the Bulgarian organized labour movement’s agenda following the decisions of the Second International – to its adoption in national legislation as well as by the International Labour Organization in 1919, and finally, the enforcement of the eight-hour day in the Bulgarian textile industry between the two world wars. This article explores continuities and changes in the struggle to adopt and enforce the eight-hour day, conceptualizing them as parts of a single negotiated social process. The article employs a gendered and multi-scale approach to explore how working time limits were negotiated on and between the shop floor, the national political stage, and in international labour organizations by diverse social groups such as (un)organized (women) workers, trade unions and labour activists with various political affiliations, the state through its labour inspectorate, as well the International Labour Organization. The article goes beyond the gender-neutral language of legal documents, instead arguing that the eight-hour day was conceptualized differently – with some variations depending on women’s life-course stage and social circumstances – and held particular importance for women workers.
“女工每天八小时”:19世纪90年代至30年代,国际劳工政治和车间之间在保加利亚纺织业谈判工作时间
摘要本文调查了八小时工作日的问题及其应用,从19世纪90年代初,当它在第二国际的决定后首次出现在保加利亚有组织的劳工运动的议程上,到1919年被国家立法和国际劳工组织通过,最后,在两次世界大战期间,保加利亚纺织业实行了每天八小时的规定。本文探讨了在采用和实施每天八小时制的斗争中的连续性和变化,将其概念化为单一协商社会过程的一部分。这篇文章采用了一种性别化和多尺度的方法,探讨了不同的社会团体,如(非)有组织的(妇女)工人、工会和具有不同政治派别的劳工活动家、国家通过其劳工监察局、,以及国际劳工组织。这篇文章超越了法律文件中的性别中立语言,相反,它认为每天八小时的概念不同——根据女性的人生历程阶段和社会环境有一些变化——对女性工作者来说尤其重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
0.70
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28
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