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E-raamat: Proletarian Lives: Routines, Identity, and Culture in Contentious Politics

(Washington and Lee University, Virginia)
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Based on multi-year ethnographic fieldwork on the Unemployed Workers' Movement in Argentina (also known as the piqueteros), Proletarian Lives provides a case study of how workers affected by job loss protect their traditional forms of life by engaging in progressive grassroots mobilization. Using life-history interviews and participant observation, the book analyzes why some activists develop a strong attachment to the movement despite initial reluctance and frequent ideological differences. Marcos Pérez argues that a key appeal of participation is the opportunity to engage in age and gender-specific practices associated with a respectable blue-collar lifestyle threatened by long-term socioeconomic decline. Through their daily involvement in the movement, older participants reconstruct the routines they associate with a golden past in which factory jobs were plentiful, younger activists develop the kind of habits they were raised to see as valuable, and all members protect communal activities undermined by the expansion of poverty and violence.

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An ethnographic study of how people in one of Latin America's most notorious social movements became long-term activists.
List of Figures
viii
Acknowledgments ix
1 Introduction
1(28)
2 "I Became a Bum": Economic Reforms and Everyday Life in Argentina
29(20)
3 "The Struggle Is on the Streets": Democracy, Neoliberalism, and Piquetero Mobilization
49(22)
4 "I Know What It Means to Follow a Schedule": Reconstruction of Past Routines
71(30)
5 "If It Rains or Hails, You Still Have to Show Up for Work": Development of New Habits
101(25)
6 "We Drink Mate, Eat a Good Stew, Talk and That Way Time Flies": Protection of Communal Activities
126(34)
7 "A Small Thing to Get By": Potential, Voluntary, and Reluctant Dropouts
160(24)
8 Conclusion
184(12)
Appendix A An Ethnography of a Poor People's Movement in the Global South 196(18)
Appendix B List of Recorded Interviewees 214(12)
References 226(15)
Index 241
Marcos E. Pérez is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Washington and Lee University. His research has appeared in the Latin American Research Review, Qualitative Sociology, Mobilization, Latin American Perspectives, Conflicto Social, Sociedad, and Argumentos.