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About this Book...This book is like a master key that unlocks the
doors leading to Divine Prosperity and Spiritual Success, thereby
guaranteeing us an even closer encounter with Almighty God, the
Ultimate Source of all Wealth.
About this Book...This book is like a master key that unlocks the
doors leading to Divine Prosperity and Spiritual Success, thereby
guaranteeing us an even closer encounter with Almighty God, the
Ultimate Source of all Wealth.
Proletarian Nights, previously published in English as Nights of
Labor and one of Ranciere's most important works, dramatically
reinterprets the Revolution of 1830, contending that workers were
not rebelling against specific hardships and conditions but against
the unyielding predetermination of their lives. Through a study of
worker-run newspapers, letters, journals, and worker-poetry,
Ranciere reveals the contradictory and conflicting stories that
challenge the coherence of these statements celebrating labor. This
updated edition includes a new preface by the author, revisiting
the work twenty years since its first publication in France.
The essays in this book, like all other texts, have been written in
a historical context that shapes both the themes and the prose
styles of the authors. A close reading of these texts would in fact
lead to many overlapping contexts of politics, social hierarchies,
modern communications, and international relations, but we want to
focus briefly on two contextual influences that carry the most
obvious connections to this book: the wide-ranging public debate
about the proper curriculum for American schools and universities,
and the more specific debate among historians about new trends in
historical scholarship.
The expansion of the Paris sewer system during the Second Empire
and Third Republic was both a technological and political triumph.
The sewers themselves were an important cultural phenomenon, and
the men who worked in them a source of fascination. Donald Reid
shows that observing how such laborers as cesspool cleaners and
sewermen present themselves and are represented by others is a way
to reflect on the material and cultural foundations of everyday
life. For bourgeois urbanites, the sewer became the repository of
latent anxieties about disease, disorder, and anarchy. The sewermen
themselves formed a model army of labor in an era of social
upheaval in the workplace. They were pioneers both in demanding the
right of public servants to unionize and in securing social welfare
measures. They were among the first French manual laborers to win
the eight-hour day, paid vacations, and other benefits. Reid
transcends traditional categories by bringing together the
infrastructure and the cultural supports of society, viewing
technocracy and its achievements in technical, political and
cultural terms. Historians of modern France, and Francophiles in
search of the unusual, will welcome the cultural interfaces of
urban history, labor history, and the history of technology his
book provides. His text is enlivened by drawings and photographs of
the life below Paris streets, and illuminated by references to
literary sources such as Hugo's Les Miserables and Giraudoux's The
Madwoman of Chaillot.
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