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引用次数: 19
摘要
这些都是关于从家开始进入劳动史的有力描述Emma Amador、Max Fraser、Naomi R Williams,史黛西·L·史密斯(Stacey L Smith)强调了一个曾经被宣布为死亡的领域的生活史,这个领域越来越成为历史项目的核心,就像在新冠肺炎大流行期间出现的隐形工人阶级一样,这些新的声音加强了学术和社会评论之间的联系,从而进一步扩展了该领域的边界。这些个人叙事最初是在2019年LAWCHA会议上由本杂志组织的一次会议上提出的,它们有着共同的主题。它们显示了劳动史主题的不断扩展,为谁是工人阶级以及什么构成工作提供了新的视角他们属于一个更大的混乱类别的趋势
These are powerful accounts of starting from home and coming to labor history Emma Amador, Max Fraser, Naomi R Williams, and Stacey L Smith underscore the living pasts of a field once pronounced as dead that increasingly has become as central to the historical project as the invisibilized working class that has emerged as essential during the COVID-19 pandemic In recounting the origins of their research, these new voices reinforce the link between scholarship and social commentary in ways that further extend the boundaries of the field Originally presented during the 2019 LAWCHA conference at a session organized by this journal, these personal narratives share major themes They show a continual expansion of the subject of labor history, providing fresh perspectives on who counts as working class and what constitutes work They belong to a larger trend of scrambling categories at
期刊介绍:
LABOUR provides a forum for analysis and debate on issues concerning labour economics and industrial relations. The Journal publishes high quality contributions which combine economic theory and statistical methodology in order to analyse behaviour, institutions and policies relevant to the labour market.