The lives of plantation laborers are usually depicted in terms reminiscent of eighteenth-century soldiering - nasty, brutish, and short. While the structures governing their lives varied from place to place and over time, the authoritarian and coercive nature of the plantation system itself remained pervasive. Recent research has shown, however, that the responses of plantation workers to the demands of their workplace were in fact quite variable, from acquiescence to outright rebellion, from collaboration with management to attempts to carve out private lives offering a sense of self-esteem. By focusing on the relationship between resistance and accommodation, Plantation Workers provides the first systematic examination of the kinds of responses offered to the plantation regime. The essays cast an analytical eye over the contexts of workers' lives within which resistance and accommodation were played out. Looking at these responses as two aspects of the same activity, contributors account for the circumstances under which worker resistance could be mounted and, conversely, employer pressure sustained. Most chapters focus on the Pacific Islands, but the collection includes studies from Latin America and Australia, enabling a comparative evaluation of the actual working experiences of plantation laborers and a more nuanced understanding of the people who labored in the "factories in the field." Plantation Workers is a valuable addition to Pacific Islands historiography, comparative labor history, the history of race relations, and peasant studies.
This pioneering collection of essays brings together a description and analysis of women workers and the socio-economic systems of plantations world-wide.
Following a story from the Caribbean to the colony of Georgia through debates over the abolition of the slave trade and finally to the antebellum South, The Nature of Slavery demonstrates the pervasiveness of a groundless theory about ...
Plantations and Plantation Workers
"A scholarly work but as readable as a novel, this is the first history of plantation life as experienced by the laborers themselves.
Filipino Plantation Workers in Hawaii: A Study of Incomes, Expenditures, and Living Standards of Filipino Families on an Hawaiian Sugar...
Women Plantation Workers
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations.
117–48 ; and David Barry Gaspar , Bondmen and Rebels : A Study of MasterSlave Relations in Antigua ( Baltimore , 1985 ) , pp . 65–68 , 93-99 . 3. Gaspar , Bondmen and Rebels , ch . 4 ; Robert V. Wells , The Population of the British ...
Stoler, A. Capitalism in Confrontation in Sumatra's Plantation Belt 1870–1979, New York: Yale University Press, 1985. Subramaniyan, A. Working Class Movement in Tea Plantations in Nilgiris, mimeo, Madras: Government Press, 1989.