Description

Book Synopsis
Maura Finkelstein examines what it means for textile mill workers in Mumbai—who are assumed to not exist—to live during a period of deindustrialization, showing how mills and workers' bodies constitute an archive of Mumbai's history that challenge common thinking about the city's past, present, and future.

Trade Review
"Finkelstein’s work is very refreshing. . . . The data involved is rich, and the theoretical framings and arguments very persuasive." -- Sinead D'Silva * LSE Review of Books *
"Tackling the question of power, of the structure of domination in post-colony, and of the lives lived among the imperial debris makes The Archive of Loss an engaging reading for those willing to advance the project started by Maura Finkelstein and to approach ethnographically both the official records and the alternative archives. . . . The book offers a detailed description of decay and ruination as a prolonged process that follows its own logic and unfolds according to its own rules, supporting a ghostly presence of the past that refuses to die down." -- Natalia Kovalyova * Anthropology Book Forum *
“In each chapter-archive, Finkelstein urges the reader to reflect on how some forms of work in contemporary capitalist society are rendered meaningless in order to sustain others.... Researchers studying the history of Mumbai’s textile mills, the processes of deindustrialization, storytelling, and archiving, and affect theory will find value in engaging with this book.” -- Saumya Pandey * Society for the Anthropology of Work *
“The conceptual framing of the book is refreshingly original, the prose elegant and the structure convincing.... By carefully spelling out phenomena that do not fit into established narratives, the book illuminates the blind spot of dominant explanations.” -- Pablo Holwitt * South Asia *
“The significance of this powerful book goes beyond being an ethnography of the urban or the spatial.... Archives of Loss is a must-read for understanding urban transition.” -- Sarasij Majumder * Journal of Anthropological Research *
“Maura Finkelstein’s book is a wonderful ethnographic study.... [The Archive of Loss] is an important addition to studies of urban workers and the textile industry and is important for anthropology, ethnography, human geography, urban history and labour studies.” -- Vicki Crinis * Asian Studies Review *
The Archive of Loss is an exemplary ethnography of a world in transition, caught as it is between an industrial past and post-industrial present, and the unexpected openings—material, social, political—of seeing this world otherwise.” -- Waqas H. Butt * Anthropological Quarterly *
“Maura Finkelstein’s The Archive of Loss is a finely theorized ethnographic archive of what she calls lively ruination that pushes methodological boundaries in novel ways.” -- Preeti Sampat * American Ethnologist *
Archive of Loss is fascinating. It is an original, remarkable, and admirable account of other sides of the glossy coins of Mumbai as a post-industrial city aiming to reach world-class status (whatever that may mean). It is moreover a convincing ‘first-hand’ account of the working and social lives of those Mumbaikars who live somewhere in the shadows of ‘development.’” -- Hans Schenk * IIAS Review *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
A Note on Intimate Geographies xi
Introduction: The Archive of Industrial Debris 1
1. The Archive of the Mill 29
2. The Archive of the Worker 57
3. The Archive of the Chawl 85
4. The Archive of the Strike 117
5. The Archive of the Fire 149
Epilogue: The Archive of Futures Lost 181
Notes 193
References 225
Index 247

The Archive of Loss

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    A Paperback / softback by Maura Finkelstein

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 26/04/2019
      ISBN13: 9781478003984, 978-1478003984
      ISBN10: 1478003987

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Maura Finkelstein examines what it means for textile mill workers in Mumbai—who are assumed to not exist—to live during a period of deindustrialization, showing how mills and workers' bodies constitute an archive of Mumbai's history that challenge common thinking about the city's past, present, and future.

      Trade Review
      "Finkelstein’s work is very refreshing. . . . The data involved is rich, and the theoretical framings and arguments very persuasive." -- Sinead D'Silva * LSE Review of Books *
      "Tackling the question of power, of the structure of domination in post-colony, and of the lives lived among the imperial debris makes The Archive of Loss an engaging reading for those willing to advance the project started by Maura Finkelstein and to approach ethnographically both the official records and the alternative archives. . . . The book offers a detailed description of decay and ruination as a prolonged process that follows its own logic and unfolds according to its own rules, supporting a ghostly presence of the past that refuses to die down." -- Natalia Kovalyova * Anthropology Book Forum *
      “In each chapter-archive, Finkelstein urges the reader to reflect on how some forms of work in contemporary capitalist society are rendered meaningless in order to sustain others.... Researchers studying the history of Mumbai’s textile mills, the processes of deindustrialization, storytelling, and archiving, and affect theory will find value in engaging with this book.” -- Saumya Pandey * Society for the Anthropology of Work *
      “The conceptual framing of the book is refreshingly original, the prose elegant and the structure convincing.... By carefully spelling out phenomena that do not fit into established narratives, the book illuminates the blind spot of dominant explanations.” -- Pablo Holwitt * South Asia *
      “The significance of this powerful book goes beyond being an ethnography of the urban or the spatial.... Archives of Loss is a must-read for understanding urban transition.” -- Sarasij Majumder * Journal of Anthropological Research *
      “Maura Finkelstein’s book is a wonderful ethnographic study.... [The Archive of Loss] is an important addition to studies of urban workers and the textile industry and is important for anthropology, ethnography, human geography, urban history and labour studies.” -- Vicki Crinis * Asian Studies Review *
      The Archive of Loss is an exemplary ethnography of a world in transition, caught as it is between an industrial past and post-industrial present, and the unexpected openings—material, social, political—of seeing this world otherwise.” -- Waqas H. Butt * Anthropological Quarterly *
      “Maura Finkelstein’s The Archive of Loss is a finely theorized ethnographic archive of what she calls lively ruination that pushes methodological boundaries in novel ways.” -- Preeti Sampat * American Ethnologist *
      Archive of Loss is fascinating. It is an original, remarkable, and admirable account of other sides of the glossy coins of Mumbai as a post-industrial city aiming to reach world-class status (whatever that may mean). It is moreover a convincing ‘first-hand’ account of the working and social lives of those Mumbaikars who live somewhere in the shadows of ‘development.’” -- Hans Schenk * IIAS Review *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments vii
      A Note on Intimate Geographies xi
      Introduction: The Archive of Industrial Debris 1
      1. The Archive of the Mill 29
      2. The Archive of the Worker 57
      3. The Archive of the Chawl 85
      4. The Archive of the Strike 117
      5. The Archive of the Fire 149
      Epilogue: The Archive of Futures Lost 181
      Notes 193
      References 225
      Index 247

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