Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis: the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia
This article describes worker narratives of discontent in relation to a series of crises that occurred at the Uljanik shipyard over the course of 2018. It draws on five months of fieldwork conducted in the period between two worker protests at the shipyard surrounding the late payment of wages, the...
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
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Regensburg
Leibniz-Institut für Ost- und Südosteuropforschung
November 2018
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Schriftenreihe: | IOS-Mitteilungen
Nr. 67 |
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Zusammenfassung: | This article describes worker narratives of discontent in relation to a series of crises that occurred at the Uljanik shipyard over the course of 2018. It draws on five months of fieldwork conducted in the period between two worker protests at the shipyard surrounding the late payment of wages, the second of which transformed into a large-scale strike. Emphasis is placed on the oft-repeated trope of "systematic" or "all-encompassing destruction" (sustavno uništavanje). This trope was often used to describe the perceived non-transparent, destructive activities of agents positioned at the top of a hierarchy (the firm management, the local authorities, the national government), acting with the hidden agenda of deliberately running the shipyard into the ground for their own personal gain. The article begins with a vignette highlighting several of the key actors and narratives present. The context of worker organizing and of the shipyard crisis are then elucidated. Following this, workers’ self-organizing during the crisis is examined. The affective landscape during this liminal period is described, with a focus on fear, anxiety, blame, rumours and a (sometimes reasonable) suspicion or paranoia. The trope of "systematic destruction" is discussed in relation to the affective landscape. It is then placed in the context of the importance of personalized relations in the regional political economy, and the implications of this political economy on patterns of blame and responsibility are analysed. Finally, the history of the trope of systematic destruction is discussed and the political power inherent in its ambiguities are explored. |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (v, 24 Seiten) |
Format: | kostenfrei |
Internformat
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520 | 3 | |a This article describes worker narratives of discontent in relation to a series of crises that occurred at the Uljanik shipyard over the course of 2018. It draws on five months of fieldwork conducted in the period between two worker protests at the shipyard surrounding the late payment of wages, the second of which transformed into a large-scale strike. Emphasis is placed on the oft-repeated trope of "systematic" or "all-encompassing destruction" (sustavno uništavanje). This trope was often used to describe the perceived non-transparent, destructive activities of agents positioned at the top of a hierarchy (the firm management, the local authorities, the national government), acting with the hidden agenda of deliberately running the shipyard into the ground for their own personal gain. The article begins with a vignette highlighting several of the key actors and narratives present. The context of worker organizing and of the shipyard crisis are then elucidated. Following this, workers’ self-organizing during the crisis is examined. The affective landscape during this liminal period is described, with a focus on fear, anxiety, blame, rumours and a (sometimes reasonable) suspicion or paranoia. The trope of "systematic destruction" is discussed in relation to the affective landscape. It is then placed in the context of the importance of personalized relations in the regional political economy, and the implications of this political economy on patterns of blame and responsibility are analysed. Finally, the history of the trope of systematic destruction is discussed and the political power inherent in its ambiguities are explored. | |
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spelling | Hodges, Andrew aut Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia Andrew Hodges Regensburg Leibniz-Institut für Ost- und Südosteuropforschung November 2018 1 Online-Ressource (v, 24 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier IOS-Mitteilungen Nr. 67 This article describes worker narratives of discontent in relation to a series of crises that occurred at the Uljanik shipyard over the course of 2018. It draws on five months of fieldwork conducted in the period between two worker protests at the shipyard surrounding the late payment of wages, the second of which transformed into a large-scale strike. Emphasis is placed on the oft-repeated trope of "systematic" or "all-encompassing destruction" (sustavno uništavanje). This trope was often used to describe the perceived non-transparent, destructive activities of agents positioned at the top of a hierarchy (the firm management, the local authorities, the national government), acting with the hidden agenda of deliberately running the shipyard into the ground for their own personal gain. The article begins with a vignette highlighting several of the key actors and narratives present. The context of worker organizing and of the shipyard crisis are then elucidated. Following this, workers’ self-organizing during the crisis is examined. The affective landscape during this liminal period is described, with a focus on fear, anxiety, blame, rumours and a (sometimes reasonable) suspicion or paranoia. The trope of "systematic destruction" is discussed in relation to the affective landscape. It is then placed in the context of the importance of personalized relations in the regional political economy, and the implications of this political economy on patterns of blame and responsibility are analysed. Finally, the history of the trope of systematic destruction is discussed and the political power inherent in its ambiguities are explored. kostenfrei Langzeitarchivierung durch die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Uljanik Werft (DE-588)1168268605 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 2018 gnd rswk-swf Arbeiter (DE-588)4112560-5 gnd rswk-swf Uljanik Werft (DE-588)1168268605 b Arbeiter (DE-588)4112560-5 s Geschichte 2018 z DE-604 IOS-Mitteilungen Nr. 67 (DE-604)BV041565277 67 http://www.dokumente.ios-regensburg.de/publikationen/mitteilungen/mitt_67.pdf Verlag kostenfrei |
spellingShingle | Hodges, Andrew Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia IOS-Mitteilungen Uljanik Werft (DE-588)1168268605 gnd Arbeiter (DE-588)4112560-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)1168268605 (DE-588)4112560-5 |
title | Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia |
title_auth | Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia |
title_exact_search | Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia |
title_full | Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia Andrew Hodges |
title_fullStr | Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia Andrew Hodges |
title_full_unstemmed | Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia Andrew Hodges |
title_short | Worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis |
title_sort | worker narratives of blame and responsibility during the 2018 crisis the case of the uljanik shipyard croatia |
title_sub | the case of the Uljanik Shipyard, Croatia |
topic | Uljanik Werft (DE-588)1168268605 gnd Arbeiter (DE-588)4112560-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Uljanik Werft Arbeiter |
url | http://www.dokumente.ios-regensburg.de/publikationen/mitteilungen/mitt_67.pdf |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV041565277 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hodgesandrew workernarrativesofblameandresponsibilityduringthe2018crisisthecaseoftheuljanikshipyardcroatia |