First published by Ravan Press in 1985, Cast in a Racial Mould was a pioneering book. It is now republished by Wits University Press with a new foreword by Michael Burawoy and with support from the National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences.

Entering what Marx called the hidden abode of capitalism; the labour process; this book analyzes the nature of work and worker resistance in the metal industry which lies at the core of South Africa manufacturing industry. In an introductory chapter Webster points out that most studies of the labour process have neglected worker resistance. He challenges Braverman depiction of mass production as a juggernaut which inherently imposes progressively tighter controls on workers, and points to two forms of worker resistance which have been important in the history of South Africa foundries.

Discussing the first of these in Part I, he shows how resistance to deskilling on the part of white craft moulders gave rise to a distinctive racial hierarchy of control in the foundries. Using race as a last line of defence against machinofacture assault on their craft privileges, the white moulders effectively became supervisors of semi-skilled black labour;The collapse of this form of control was precipitated by the rise, in a South African foundry context, of the second form of resistance ; increasingly confident bargaining by black semi-skilled workers in the wake of mechanization and the emergence of independent black unions. This is the focus of Parts II and III of the book. The onset of popular struggle in the townships from 1976 onwards forced the state, through a process that began with the Wiehahn and Riekert commissions, to embark on an attempt to incorporate black unions in a deracialized industrial relations system. Webster analyzes the interplay between the transformation of the labour process and the crisis in the system of racial capitalism as a whole to show how worker organizations, in resisting the state incorporative strategy, have begun to develop a working class.

Les mer
First published by Ravan Press in 1985, Cast in a Racial Mould was a pioneering book. It is now republished by Wits University Press with a new foreword by Michael Burawoy and with support from the National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences.
Les mer

Foreword to this Edition by Michael Burawoy

Acknowledgements

List of Abbreviations

Preface

Chapter 1 Introduction: Class Struggle in the Foundry

Part 1 The Colour of Craft

Chapter 2 The Heyday of the Labour Aristocrat: The Stage of Manufacture, 1896–1930

Chapter 3 Contesting Skill: Deskilling and the Transition to Machinofacture

Chapter 4 The Theory and Practice of Taylorism in the Early Post-War Period

Chapter 5 From Craft to Colour: The IMS and Job Protection, 1944–1968

Part 2 The Crisis of Control in the Labour Process

Chapter 6 Managerial Resistance to Black Unions, 1973–1977

Chapter 7 Opening the Closed Unions: Restructuring the Racial Division of Labour

Chapter 8 The International Factor: The IMF in South Africa, 1974–1980

Part 3 The Experiment Begins: The Search for a New Form of Control in the Workplace

Chapter 9 Workers Divided: Labour Market Segmentation in the Foundry

Chapter 10 Reform from Above: First Steps in the Deracialization of the Industrial Council System

Chapter 11 The Challenge from Below: The Rise of the Shop Steward Movement

Chapter 12 Cast in Racial Mould: The Birth of a Working-Class Politics

Bibliography

Index

Photographs between pages 158 and 159

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An examination of labour resistance in South Africa's metal industry, revealing how racial dynamics and worker organization transformed industrial relations between 1976-1989.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781776149612
Publisert
2025-05-25
Utgiver
Wits University Press
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
340

Biografisk notat

Edward Webster (Author)
Edward Webster is Distinguished Research Professor in the Southern Centre for Inequality and founder of the Society, Work and Development Institute Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg

Michael Burawoy (Author)
Michael Burawoy is professor at the University of California, Berkley. He was President of the International Sociological Association (ISA) until 2014.