Last week, I appeared in radio. It was in a daily magazine program called “Apropos” on Danish Radio channel 1. Since the program was starting again after a summer break, the theme of the week was work.

My task was to tell the history of working hours: from the 10-11 hours workdays, dictated by the employers in the 1860’s, through the demand for an 8 hour day, raised by trade unions in 1899 and realized in 1919, until today’s 37 hours working week. We also discussed the reasons for lowering the workday throughout the 20th century. Finally I was asked about my view on future working hours: especially the actual, political proposal by the left to increase the work week with one hour.

The program is available (in Danish) on the “Apropos” website – or through direct download

People have spun yarn and woven fabrics through thousands of years. It was a production which was predominantly carried out as homework or crafts. During the 1700s, though, a revolutionary process was started in England: work became concentrated in large units, equipped with machines powered at first by water wheels and later by steam engines. The industrial form of production spread from England to the European mainland and from there eventually to the rest of the world.
Industrialization changed not just production processes but also working conditions and the composition and living conditions of the labourers. Men, women and children were recruited to the factories in their thousands. Cities grew. Traditional forms of organizing and thinking about work became obsolete and new organizations and ideas were created. This is the story that is told in a new publication: “The Ashgate Companion to the History of Textile Workers, 1650-2000″. The book, which is 860 pages, is the result of an international research collaboration, launched at the initiative of the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam.

Textile industry is interesting because it was where industrialization began. But also because it is a global phenomenon. The book’s first part consists of articles on textile production and textile workers’ history in 20 different countries worldwide – including Denmark. With due respect for national differences, the story is told from the times of pre-industrial production, throughout the industrial breakthroughs and peaks until today, where the textile industry is being phased out in the areas where it started: Western Europe and the USA. But textile industry is still, indeed, a reality. On a global scale, there is probably more people employed in the textile industry than ever before in history. Now its largest parts however are centred in Asia, especially in China.  The second part of the book consists of a series of thematic articles where the authors draw comparisons across countries. For example, there are themes of globalization, labour recruitment, work organization and the gender division of labour.

CoverI have contributed two articles. The first deals with the history of textile work in Denmark. In global perspective, Denmark has never played any significant role as a textile producer. On the contrary, the Danish industry almost exclusively produced for the domestic market, while the technology used was imported from England, Germany and other major European textile nations. But Denmark, however, was a pioneer in another area, namely in the way the workforce organized itself, which led to a relatively early development of highly institutionalized and regulated industrial relations. Something, that became the basis for the subsequent development of the welfare state. This is the perspective in the article which is titled “Denmark: the textile industry and the formation of modern industrial relations.”

My second contribution is for the second part of the book, for which I have written an article entitled “Institutions in textile production: guilds and trade unions” to compare the development such institutions in different countries in a global perspective. This article is based on the other national overviews, in conjunction with general theories of unionisation. As the national overviews are written from quite different perspectives, it is not at comparative work in the strict sense. Nevertheless, I think there are grounds for some cautious conclusions, including that the role of the state and the relationship between the classes is probably more important than differences in production methods and technology, in explaining the variations in scope and aim of labour organizations.

As the title indicates, the book is published by Ashgate publishers. The complete table of contents, as well as information about price etc., can be found on the publisher’s website.

(Cross-posted from blog.nyeretid.dk)

Forsiden af Arbejderhistorie nr. 3-2009 / 1-2010The latest issue of the journal Arbejderhistorie (Labour history) is about class. Several articles deal with class as a theoretical and analytical concept.  Others are examples of the use of class in describing and explaining historical and present social phenomena.  A complete list of contributions can be found here.

I have written the article “Den modern arbejderklasse – bidrag til en skabelsesberetning” (“The modern working class – contribution to a genesis”). It is an attempt to combine a Marxist concept of class with Anthony Giddens’ theory of modernity. I describe how the working class was constituted historically in Denmark and how it came to express its own proletarian form of modernity.

The journal is in Danish, but with a short English abstract for each article. It can be ordered directly from The Society for Research in the History of the Labour Movement.

The radio-program “Apropos”, which is broadcasted every weekday, has choosen class struggle as its theme for this week. The opening program was an interview with me, about the origin of the danish labour movement and class struggle then and now.

For those who understand danish, this and the other programs are available on the  “Apropos” web-site (Part of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation).

Demonstration

Photo: Lars K. Christensen

Arbejdernes historie i DanmarkVi er en nation af lønarbejdere. Tre ud af fire voksne danskere under pensionsalderen er erhvervsaktive. Af disse erhvervsaktive er mere end 90% lønarbejdere. Af lønarbejderne er 7 ud af 10 – svarende til ca. 1,8 mio. mennesker – medlemmer af en fagforening.

Det er høje tal, set i en international sammenhæng. I et historisk perspektiv er det også bemærkelsesværdigt, at det danske arbejdsmarked blev organiseret meget tidligt. Septemberforliget i 1899 var verdens første overenskomst mellem en national, faglig sammenslutning og en tilsvarende arbejdsgiverforening.

Septemberforliget lagde en ramme for arbejdsmarkedets organisering, som i hovedtræk stadig er gældende den dag i dag. Men idenfor rammen var der fortsat kamp og diskussion om mange spørgsmål: fra lønnens størrelse over arbejdstidens længde til graden af medindflydelse og demokrati på arbejdspladsen.

Sideløbende hermed voksede den politiske arbejderbevægelse sig stærk. Gennem størstedelen af det 20. århundrede har Socialdemokratiet spillet en dominerende rolle i dansk politik. Efterhånden kom der også andre partier til på venstrefløjen. Og igennem samme periode, har de tanker, ideer og kulturelle værdier som er udsprunget af arbejderbevægelsen præget samfundet på mangfoldige områder.

Vil man forstå ikke bare Danmarkshistorien, men også baggrunden for tidens aktuelle diskussioner om f.eks. arbejdstid, velfærdsreformer og “flexicurity”, så kommer man ikke uden om at beskæftige sig med arbejderklassens og arbejderbevægelsens historie.

Sammen med Anette E. Hansen og Søren Kolstrup har jeg skrevet bogen Arbejdernes historien i Danmark 1800-2000. Som titlen siger, så handler bogen om arbejderklassens og -bevægelsens historie. Den er tænkt som et oversigtsværk, som henvender sig både til almindeligt interesserede læsere såvel som til de, der ønsker en introduktion til et nærmere studium. Af hensyn til de sidstnævnte er bogen rigeligt forsynet med noter og litteraturhenvisninger. Men bogen er også rigt illustreret og kan læses blot for den gode histories skyld…

Bogen, som er på ca. 460 sider, udgives af Selskabet til Forskning i Arbejderbevægelsens Historie. Den udkommer d. 10. maj.

Industrikultur i Danmark 1850-1914

I anledningen af Industrikulturens år 2007 er der udkommet en antologi med tekster om industrikultur i Danmark 1850-1914. Antologien, som er produceret af skoletjenesten, er beregnet til undervisning i gymnasiet og andre ungdomsuddannelser – men kan naturligvis også læses af andre, med interesse for emnet.

Bidragene er primært skrevet af museumsfolk fra Nationalmuseet, Teknisk Museum, Arbejdermuseet og flere andre. Indholdsmæssigt spænder de fra industrisamfundets teknologi over arbejderbevægelsen og Septemberforliget til byplanlægning og billedkunst. Stilen er lettilgængelig med mange illustrationer.

Undertegnede har bidraget med artiklen Proletarerne kommer! – en titel som spiller på den frygt, som opkomsten af en ny, industriel arbejderklasse skabte blandt landets bedre borgere i 1800-tallets sidste halvdel. Således udgav den københavnske præst Vilhelm Munck i 1868 en bog hvori han bekymret konstaterede, at der i hovedstaden “findes ikke blot overmaade megen fattigdom, men et stærkt og farligt proletariat”. Proletarerne fandt efterhånden sammen, organiserede sig og blev til en arbejderbevægelse i moderne forstand. Det var denne bevægelse, langt mere end de bekymrede borgere, som skulle bekæmpe fattigdommen og uligheden. Hermed forandrede man også samfundet – i sådan en grad, at proletarerne i løbet af godt et halvt århundrede forandredes fra at være en trussel mod den offentlige orden til at være grundlaget for landets regering.

Antologien kan bestilles hos skoletjenesten. Den koster 50 kr. for et enkelt eksemplar og 300 kr. for et klassesæt.

Lars K. Christensen Credits