Results 351 to 360 of about 9,821,585 (424)
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The Making of the English Working Class.

, 1965
Fifty years since first publication, E. P. Thompson's revolutionary account of working-class culture and ideals is published in Penguin Modern Classics, with a new introduction by historian Michael Kenny.
R. Bendix, E. P. Thompson
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Working With the Working Class

Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 1972
T lo lo the typical New York City college professorthe one who was bar (or bas) mitzvahed in the proper fashion, who attended City College and a good graduate school, and who has since that time considered himself liberal and intellectualthe working class remains a great mystery.
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The Working Class

1987
Like any major historical phenomenon, the Mexican Revolution can be viewed from a variety of angles. From one, arguably the most important, it was a rural phenomenon, rightly categorized by Eric Wolf (1969) as a “peasant war”, hence comparable to the Russian or Chinese Revolutions. From another it can be seen as a generalized social and political (some
Paul Cammack   +2 more
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Working Class Dreams, Working Class God

The Expository Times, 2010
Drawing on his experience of three different pastoral contexts, Kevin Ellis seeks to put the questions of how the Churches in England interact with working class culture, and indeed in what ways do the those who consider themselves to be working class interact with the Church, back on the agenda.
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Class and Precarity: An Unhappy Coupling in China’s Working Class Formation

Work, Employment and Society, 2018
In refuting Guy Standing’s precariat as a class, we highlight that employment situation, worker identity and legal rights are mistakenly taken as theoretical components of class formation.
Chrissie Smith, N. Pun
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Working Class or Classes?

1998
The Belfast shipyard worker was well paid and organised compared to many other groups in the city’s labour force in the years before the First World War. Did their privileged position give them the status of a ‘labour aristocracy’ distinct from the rest of the ‘working class’ in these years? How did their experience compare with other groups of workers
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Labor's Love Lost: The Rise and Fall of the Working‐Class Family in America

, 2017
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Brittany Love, Krista Lynn Minnotte
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The White Working Class

, 2018
In recent years, the world has been re-introduced to the constituency of “white working class” people. In a wave of revolutionary populism, far right parties have scored victories across the transatlantic political world: Britain voted to leave the ...
J. Gest
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Working Class

1986
Why bother to talk about the “working class?” In modern British society, few people own much in the way of wealth or property, and most of us have to sell what labour power we possess in return for wages. In this sense, aren’t we all workers now?
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Working class

2007
Classe ouvrière ? La notion paraît datée, associée à un type de mobilisation propre au XXème siècle. Le marxisme, sous ses différentes formes, lui a donné une forte visibilité dans différentes scènes idéologique, politique, artistique mais aussi scientifique.
Mischi, Julian, Renahy, Nicolas
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