The social history of labor in the Iranian oil industry : the built environment and the making of the industrial working class (1908-1941)
The formation of the wage laboring class in the Iranian oil industry during the first decades of the 20th century is studied as a tangled global-local social history. The analysis seeks to situate the oil complex in Iran within the interlinked contexts of the global transformations of World War One,...
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Format: | Dissertation |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The formation of the wage laboring class in the Iranian oil industry
during the first decades of the 20th century is studied as a tangled
global-local social history. The analysis seeks to situate the oil
complex in Iran within the interlinked contexts of the global
transformations of World War One, the social and political-economic
tumults of the interwar period, the changing geopolitics of the Persian
Gulf and Anglo Iranian relations, the consequences of the 1921 coup
d’état in Iran, the local transformations of the oil rich province of
Khuzestan, and the urban histories of the oil mining town of Masjed
Soleyman and especially the refinery and port city of Abadan. As
petroleum was becoming the primary raw material of Fordism and the
second industrial revolution the accumulation of capital in oil required
the dismantling of existing social structures and the reassembly of
resources, technical expertise, and populations in modern built
environments designed for oil capitalism. The urban social history of
these oil cities shed light on the contentious processes that led to the
making of an industrial oil working class, as well as the formation of
modern state institutions in Iran, and the Anglo Persian Oil Company |
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