2018
DOI: 10.1017/s0147547917000254
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The Politics of Disembarkation: Empire, Shipping and Labor in the Port of Durban, 1897–1947

Abstract: This article examines the labor politics of race in Durban harbor between 1897 and 1947. It approaches the subject from an analysis of labor in a global, and particularly a British Empire, context. The article aims to move away from a solely “national” focus on the South African state and instead to look “up” toward connections to the British Empire, the world economy, and global social and political movements, and “down” towards Durban itself. These large scale (imperial and global) and small scale (city) lev… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 15 publications
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“…In the British Empire, such a port was Durban, as Jonathan Hyslop has shown with his study of the city's settler capitalists. 101 Ports have a reputation as sites of prolonged labor conflict, and as the starting points of political revolts and revolutions. 102 Much more than the older literature, historians now stress how much the character of these workplaces as spaces of connectivity defines the politicization of port labor.…”
Section: Port Cities: Gateways To World History?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the British Empire, such a port was Durban, as Jonathan Hyslop has shown with his study of the city's settler capitalists. 101 Ports have a reputation as sites of prolonged labor conflict, and as the starting points of political revolts and revolutions. 102 Much more than the older literature, historians now stress how much the character of these workplaces as spaces of connectivity defines the politicization of port labor.…”
Section: Port Cities: Gateways To World History?mentioning
confidence: 99%