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6. Custom and Respectability: The Petty Sessions
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Maps, Tables, and Figures ix
- Preface xi
-
Part I: Encountering Labour in Field, Archives, and Theory
- 1. Political Economy, Class, and Locality 3
- 2. Relations of Class and Thomas town’s ‘Lower Orders’ in 1800 19
-
Part II: Labouring Experience in the Nineteenth Century
- 3. Realizing the Working Class: Political Economy and Culture 39
- 4. Political Domains and Working Combinations after 1815 80
- 5. The Political Domain: Labour as Device, Resource, and Project 100
- 6. Custom and Respectability: The Petty Sessions 119
- 7. Privatizing the River: Politicizing Labouring Fishers 142
-
Part III: At the Turn of the Twentieth Century, 1885–1901
- 8. Political Sentiment and the Inland Fisheries 167
- 9. Social Organization and the Politics of Labour 193
-
Part IV: Metissage and Hegemony, 1901–50
- 10. The Organizational Impetus: Class and Nationalism before the War, 1906–14 217
- 11. From Class to Nation: National Chronology and Local Experience, 1914–23 243
- 12. From Nation to Class in the New State: Replicating Capital and Labour, 1920–6 262
- 13. Labouring Viewpoints and Lives: The Metissage of Experience and Identities, 1914–30 281
- 14. The Uneven Economy and the Moral Economy, 1926–50 301
- 15. The Quality of Charity, Values, and Entitlements, 1908–50 321
- 16. Redundancy and Status-Class: Purveying Values through Recreation and Education, 1929–50 339
- 17. ‘And the Church Preached Its View’ 359
- 18. ‘We Had a Live Union Then’ 380
- 19. ‘Much Wants More’: Framing the Politics of Labour 401
- 20. Inside the Frame: The Politics of Mediation 421
- 21. Organizing Labour in the 1940s: The Politics of Combination 442
- 22. Reproducing the Political Regime and Regimen, 1940–50 461
-
Part V: Conclusions: Political Economy and Culture, 1800–1950
- 23. Theory, Concept, and Text: A Holistic Approach to the Politics of Class 482
- Notes 505
- Bibliography 539
- Index 551
- Backmatter 567
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Maps, Tables, and Figures ix
- Preface xi
-
Part I: Encountering Labour in Field, Archives, and Theory
- 1. Political Economy, Class, and Locality 3
- 2. Relations of Class and Thomas town’s ‘Lower Orders’ in 1800 19
-
Part II: Labouring Experience in the Nineteenth Century
- 3. Realizing the Working Class: Political Economy and Culture 39
- 4. Political Domains and Working Combinations after 1815 80
- 5. The Political Domain: Labour as Device, Resource, and Project 100
- 6. Custom and Respectability: The Petty Sessions 119
- 7. Privatizing the River: Politicizing Labouring Fishers 142
-
Part III: At the Turn of the Twentieth Century, 1885–1901
- 8. Political Sentiment and the Inland Fisheries 167
- 9. Social Organization and the Politics of Labour 193
-
Part IV: Metissage and Hegemony, 1901–50
- 10. The Organizational Impetus: Class and Nationalism before the War, 1906–14 217
- 11. From Class to Nation: National Chronology and Local Experience, 1914–23 243
- 12. From Nation to Class in the New State: Replicating Capital and Labour, 1920–6 262
- 13. Labouring Viewpoints and Lives: The Metissage of Experience and Identities, 1914–30 281
- 14. The Uneven Economy and the Moral Economy, 1926–50 301
- 15. The Quality of Charity, Values, and Entitlements, 1908–50 321
- 16. Redundancy and Status-Class: Purveying Values through Recreation and Education, 1929–50 339
- 17. ‘And the Church Preached Its View’ 359
- 18. ‘We Had a Live Union Then’ 380
- 19. ‘Much Wants More’: Framing the Politics of Labour 401
- 20. Inside the Frame: The Politics of Mediation 421
- 21. Organizing Labour in the 1940s: The Politics of Combination 442
- 22. Reproducing the Political Regime and Regimen, 1940–50 461
-
Part V: Conclusions: Political Economy and Culture, 1800–1950
- 23. Theory, Concept, and Text: A Holistic Approach to the Politics of Class 482
- Notes 505
- Bibliography 539
- Index 551
- Backmatter 567