Bryan D. Palmer, Trent University
The two volumes of Marxism and Historical Practice bring together essays written by one of the major Marxist historians of the last fifty years. The pieces collected in Volume I, Interpretive Essays on Class Formation and Class Struggle, offer a stimulating, empirically grounded survey of North American collective behaviour, popular mobilizations, and social struggles, ranging from a rich discussion of ritualistic protest like the charivari through the rise of the Knights of Labor in the 1880s to campaigns against neoliberal labour reform in British Columbia in the early 1980s. What emerges is Palmer’s sustained reflection on long-standing interpretive historical problems of class formation, the dynamics of social change, and how popular social movements arise and relate to law, the state, and existing cultural contexts.
Biographical note
Readership
Table of contents
Introduction
PART I: CLASS STRUGGLE BEFORE THE CONSOLIDATION OF CLASS
1. Discordant Music: Charivaris and Whitecapping in Nineteenth-Century North America
2. Popular Radicalism and the Theatrics of Rebellion: The Hybrid Discourse of Dissent in Upper Canada in the 1830s
PART II: WORKERS’ CULTURES, STRUGGLES, AND MOBILISATIONS IN THE AGE OF CAPITALIST CONSOLIDATION, 1860–1920
3. In Street and Field and Hall: The Culture of Hamilton Workingmen, 1860–1914
4. The Bonds of Unity: The Knights of Labor in Ontario, 1880–1900
5. Class, Conception and Conflict: The Thrust for Efficiency, Managerial Views of Labour, and the Working Class Rebellion, 1903–22
PART III: CLASS STRUGGLE IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE POST-WAR SETTLEMENT
6. Wildcat Workers in the 1960s: The Unruly Face of Class Struggle
7. British Columbia’s Solidarity: Reformism and the Fight Against the Right
PART IV: REMAPPING THE LANDSCAPE OF CLASS FORMATION: COMPARISONS AND CONJUNCTURES IN LABOUR HISTORY’S TELESCOPED LONGUE DURÉE
8. Social Formation and Class Formation in North America, 1800–1900
9. ‘Cracking the Stone’: The Long History of Capitalist Crisis and Toronto’s Dispossessed, 1830–1930
10. What’s Law Got to Do with It? Historical Considerations on Class Struggle, Boundaries of Constraint, and Capitalist Authority
References
Index