Work and Revolution in France: The Language of Labor from the Old Regime to 1848
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About this book
Work and Revolution in France is particularly appropriate for students of French history interested in the crucial revolutions that took place in 1789 1830 and 1848. Sewell has reconstructed the artisans world from the corporate communities of the old regime through the revolutions in 1789 and 1830 to the socialist experiments of 1848. Research has revealed that the most important class struggles took place in craft workshops not in dark satanic mills. In the 1830s and 1840s workers combined the collectivism of the corporate guild tradition with the egalitarianism of the revolutionary tradition producing a distinct artisan form of socialism and class consciousness that climaxed in the Parisian Revolution of 1848. The book follows artisans into their everyday experience of work fellowship and struggles and places their history in the context of wider political economic and social developments. Sewell analyzes the language of labor in the broadest sense dealing not only with what the workers and others wrote and said about labour but with the whole range of institutional conventions economic practices social struggles ritual gestures customs and actions that gave the workers world a comprehensive shape.
