Based on intensive ethnographic fieldwork in Thailand, Textures
of Struggle focuses on the experiences of Thai women who are
employed at textile factories and examines how the all-encompassing
nature of wage work speaks to issues of worker accommodation and
resistance within various factory settings. Why are some women less
tolerant of their working conditions than others? How is it that
women who have similar levels of education, come from the same
socioeconomic background, and enter the same occupation,
nevertheless emerge with different experiences and reactions to
their wage employment?
Women in the Thai apparel industry, Piya Pangsapa finds, have
very different experiences of labor "militancy" and
"non-militancy." Through interviews with women at two kinds of
factories one linked to the global economy through local capital
investment and another through transnational capital Pangsapa
examines issues of worker consciousness with a focus on the process
by which women become activists. She explores the different degrees
of control and coercion employed by factory managers and shows how
women were able to overcome conditions of adversity by relying on
the close personal ties they developed with each other. Textures of
Struggle reveals what it is like for women to feel powerlessness
and passivity in Thai sweatshops but also shows how they are
equally able to resist and rebel."
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