From Manual Workers to Wage Laborers

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Adolphe Thiers
assistance
Breakdown
Category=JHBL
Category=JKSB
Category=NHTB
Contemporary Society
disaffiliation sociology
earner
Edward Iii
Eighteenth
embeddedness community
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
Feudal Society
Follow
Great Famines
historical evolution of social welfare
Kindred
labor history Europe
Laborers
Large Family
Legal Charity
marginalization labor markets
mass
Mass Vulnerability
Preindustrial Society
protections
proximate
Proximate Protections
question
RMI
social
Social Protections
Social Question
social stratification
Strong
traditional
Traditional Tutelage
tutelage
vulnerability
Wage Earners
Wage Earning
Wage Labor
welfare state theory
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765801494
  • Weight: 816g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jul 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In this monumental book, sociologist Robert Castel reconstructs the history of what he calls "the social question," or the ways in which both labor and social welfare have been organized from the Middle Ages onward to contemporary industrial society. Throughout, the author identifies two constants bearing directly on the question of who is entitled to relief and who can be excluded: the degree of embeddedness in any given community and the ability to work. Along this dual axis the author locates virtually the entire history of social welfare in early-modern and contemporary Europe.

This work is a systematic defense of the meaningfulness of the category of "the social," written in the tradition of Foucault, Durkheim, and Marx. Castel imaginatively builds on Durkheim's insight into the essentially social basis of work and welfare. Castel populates his sociological framework with vivid characterizations of the transient lives of the "disaffiliated": those colorful itinerants whose very existence proved such a threat to the social fabric of early-modern Europe. Not surprisingly, he discovers that the cruel and punitive measures often directed against these marginal figures are deeply implicated in the techniques and institutions of power and social control.

The author also treats the flipside of the problem of social assistance: namely, matters of work and wage-labor. Castel brilliantly reveals how the seemingly objective line of demarcation between able-bodied beggars—those who are capable of work but who chose not to do so—and those who are truly disabled becomes stretched in modernity to make room for the category of the "working poor." It is the novel crisis posed by those masses of population who are unable to maintain themselves by their labor alone that most deeply challenges modern societies and forges recognizably modern policies of social assistance.

The author's gloss on the social question also offers us valuable perspectives on contemporary debates over who should receive social assistance and whether this entitlement should be linked to the obligation to work. Castel's rich insights and brilliant generalizations are invaluable for anyone concerned with what he describes as the "new social question" of work and social welfare in contemporary society.

Robert Castel is Director of Studies at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. His other books include Le Psychanalysme; L'Ordre Psychiatrique; and La Gestion des Risques. The translator, Richard Boyd is assistant professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania, and anoted scholar of French social theory in his own right.