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dc.contributor.authorBlecher, Marc
dc.date.accessioned2023-04-18T23:56:00Z
dc.date.available2023-04-18T23:56:00Z
dc.date.issued2023-04-19
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/31115
dc.description.abstractIn the 20th century, the Chinese working class did have the opportunity, and from time to time it looked like they had might be turning the trick. But in the end, they lost. Why? Chinese workers have been the subjects of a great deal of analysis by scholars, documentation by journalists and activists, and portrayal by writers, filmmakers and artists. Light has been shone on the rich tapestry of economic, social, cultural and political forces driving them into low-paid, dangerous, degrading, alienating, mind-numbing, transient employment, on the obstacles to improvement, on workers’ understandings of their world and their lives in it, on their passivity and resistance, and on the effects of their responses. A World to Lose seeks the foundation for all this in three questions: what kind of class is the Chinese working class?; what are the historical forces and processes that have formed it?; and how does the pattern of class formation help explain the working class’s reactions historically, presently and even prospectively?en_AU
dc.language.isoenen_AU
dc.rightsCopyright All Rights Reserveden_AU
dc.subjectWorking Classen_AU
dc.subjectChinaen_AU
dc.subjectWorkeren_AU
dc.subjectMarxen_AU
dc.subjectClassen_AU
dc.titleWorking Class Formation in China Since 1920en_AU
dc.typeWorking Paperen_AU
dc.relation.otherChina Studies Centre
usyd.facultyChina Studies Centreen_AU
workflow.metadata.onlyNoen_AU


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