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The Object of Labor (Paperback, New)
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The Object of Labor (Paperback, New)
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Did socialist policies leave the economies of Eastern Europe
unprepared for current privatization efforts? Under communist rule,
were rural villages truly left untouched by capitalism? In this
historical ethnography of rural Hungary, Martha Lampland argues not
only that the transition to capitalism was well under way by the
1930s, but that socialist policies themselves played a crucial role
in the development of capitalism by transforming conceptions of
time, money, and labor.
Exploring the effects of social change thrust upon communities
against their will, Lampland examines the history of agrarian labor
in Hungary from World War I to the early 1980s. She shows that
rural workers had long been subject to strict state policies
similar to those imposed by collectivization. Since the values of
privatization and individualism associated with capitalism
characterized rural Hungarian life both prior to and throughout the
socialist period, capitalist ideologies of work and morality
survived unscathed in the private economic practices of rural
society. Lampland also shows how labor practices under socialism
prepared the workforce for capitalism. By drawing villagers into
factories and collective farms, for example, the socialist state
forced farmers to work within tightly controlled time limits and to
calculate their efforts in monetary terms. Indeed, this control and
commodification of rural labor under socialism was essential to the
transformation to capitalism.
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