The Origins of Industrial Capitalism in India :Business Strategies and the Working Classes in Bombay, 1900-1940 / Rajnarayan Chandavarkar
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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SNU LIBRARY | 305.5620954 CHA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out to P.S. Vijay Shankar (576) | 27/09/2022 00:00 | 27029 |
1. Problems and perspectives; 2. The setting: Bombay city and its hinterland; 3. The structure and development of the labour market; 4. Migration and the rural connections of Bombay's workers; 5. Girangaon: the social organization of the working class neighbourhoods; 6. The development of the cotton textile industry: a historical context; 7. The workplace: labour and the organization of production in the cotton textile industry; 8. Rationalizing work, standardizing labour: the limits of reform in the cotton textile industry; 9. Epilogue: workers politics, class caste and nation.
The first major study of the relationship between labour and capital in India's economic development in the early twentieth-century. The author considers the spread of capitalism and the growth of the cotton textile industry.
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