|
Product Description
Mumbai's textile industry is commonly but incorrectly understood to be an extinct relic of the past. In The Archive of Loss Maura Finkelstein examines what it means for textile mill workers—who are assumed not to exist—to live and work during a period of deindustrialization. Finkelstein shows how mills are ethnographic archives of the city where documents, artifacts, and stories exist in the buildings and in the bodies of workers. Workers' pain, illnesses, injuries, and exhaustion narrate industrial decline; the ways in which they live in tenements exist outside and resist the values expounded by modernity; and the rumors and untruths they share about textile worker strikes and a mill fire help them make sense of the industry's survival. In outlining this archive's contents, Finkelstein shows how mills, which she conceptualizes as lively ruins, become a lens through which to challenge, reimagine, and alter ways of thinking about the past, present, and future in Mumbai and beyond.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Garbage Citizenship: Vital Infrastructures of Labor in Dakar, Senegal
- Paradoxes of the Popular: Crowd Politics in Bangladesh (South Asia in Motion)
- Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments: Intimate Histories of Social Upheaval
- The Source of Self-Regard: Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations
- Chasing Innovation: Making Entrepreneurial Citizens in Modern India (Princeton Studies in Culture and Technology)
- Infrastructure, Environment, and Life in the Anthropocene (Experimental Futures)
- On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous: A Novel
- A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (Forerunners: Ideas First)
- Animal Intimacies: Interspecies Relatedness in India's Central Himalayas (Animal Lives)
- Self-Devouring Growth: A Planetary Parable as Told from Southern Africa (Critical Global Health: Evidence, Efficacy, Ethnography)
*If this is not the "The Archive of Loss: Lively Ruination in Mill Land Mumbai" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Dec 18, 2024 01:54 +08.