《工人阶级的死亡与垂死

Michael K. Rosenow
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引用次数: 6

摘要

在更广泛的死亡学领域,学者们研究死亡的仪式、对死亡的态度、预期寿命的演变轨迹等等。运用社会阶层的视角意味着研究类似的主题,但关注的是在美国为工资而工作的男人、女人和孩子。劳动人民更有可能死于工作场所事故、职业病或与工作有关的暴力事件。在美国历史上的大多数时期,做一名领工资的工人比当兵更危险。《绝地求生》不仅是车间,也是劳资关系的领域。美国劳工史上充满了工人维护经济正义观点与雇主捍卫其私有财产权之间的暴力冲突。这些冲突经常导致人员伤亡。工会和工人阶级社区将互助和团结的精神从工会大厅和纠察线延伸到追悼会和墓地。他们赞扬了为人类尊严运动而献身的烈士,并建立了纪念碑来纪念阵亡者。民族、种族和性别的方面增加了与个人经济地位交叉和折射的意义层次。工人与死亡的接触,以及他们理解损失和牺牲的方式,在某些方面与其他社会阶层的美国人在宗教习俗、仪式实践和物质消费方面重叠。他们的经历并不完全是独一无二的,但在许多方面存在显著差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Death and Dying in the Working Class
In the broader field of thanatology, scholars investigate rituals of dying, attitudes toward death, evolving trajectories of life expectancy, and more. Applying a lens of social class means studying similar themes but focusing on the men, women, and children who worked for wages in the United States. Working people were more likely to die from workplace accidents, occupational diseases, or episodes of work-related violence. In most periods of American history, it was more dangerous to be a wage worker than it was to be a soldier. Battlegrounds were not just the shop floor but also the terrain of labor relations. American labor history has been filled with violent encounters between workers asserting their views of economic justice and employers defending their private property rights. These clashes frequently turned deadly. Labor unions and working-class communities extended an ethos of mutualism and solidarity from the union halls and picket lines to memorial services and gravesites. They lauded martyrs to movements for human dignity and erected monuments to honor the fallen. Aspects of ethnicity, race, and gender added layers of meaning that intersected with and refracted through individuals’ economic positions. Workers’ encounters with death and the way they made sense of loss and sacrifice in some ways overlapped with Americans from other social classes in terms of religious custom, ritual practice, and material consumption. Their experiences were not entirely unique but diverged in significant ways.
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