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Salvage #6: Evidence of Things Not Seen
by multiple authors (editors)

Salvage #6: Evidence of Things Not Seen
by multiple authors (editors)

Salvage #6: Evidence of Things Not Seen
by multiple authors (editors)

219

The Demise of the International Proletariat of France: Talbot as Political Turning Point

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mostly specific to France but some interesting points on nationalism/racism in general as a means of dividing the working class (good quote from Ranciere at the beginning)

Najiels, Y. (2018). The Demise of the International Proletariat of France: Talbot as Political Turning Point. Salvage, 6, pp. 219-231

219

We had nearly the same number of immigrants twenty years ago. But they had another name then: they were called migrant workers or just plain workers. Today's immigrant is first a worker who has lost his second name, who has lost the political form of his identity and of his otherness, the form of a political subjectification of the count of the uncounted. All he now has left is a sociological identity, which then topples over into the anthropological nakedness of a different race and skin ...

opening quote

—p.219 by Jacques Rancière 6 years ago

We had nearly the same number of immigrants twenty years ago. But they had another name then: they were called migrant workers or just plain workers. Today's immigrant is first a worker who has lost his second name, who has lost the political form of his identity and of his otherness, the form of a political subjectification of the count of the uncounted. All he now has left is a sociological identity, which then topples over into the anthropological nakedness of a different race and skin ...

opening quote

—p.219 by Jacques Rancière 6 years ago