Empire, industry and class: the imperial nexus of jute, 1840-1940 - By Anthony Cox
Abstract
From the 1840s onwards, as the commercial success of jute as a packing medium grew, the fortunes of the city of Dundee, the British centre of jute manufacturing, became intertwined with that of one of Britain’s central Indian possession, Bengal. While jute cultivation, and hand manufacture was concentrated in Bengal, successes in the mechanical manufacture of the fibre led to the development of a “jute dependency” in Dundee where jute became the main employer and economic sector. After the setting up of the first jute manufacture in Bengal in 1855, the following decades witnessed the floating of many new companies around Calcutta, with Scottish – and mostly Dundonian – machines and men. By the 1890s Calcutta had become the prime centre of jute manufacture, consigning Dundee to a secondary position.
cont'd...
References
Chakrabarty, D., (1989) Rethinking Working-Class History, Bengal 1890-1940, Princeton and Delhi: Princeton University Press
De Haan, A., (1994) Unsettled settlers, Migrant workers and industrial capitalism in Calcutta, Rotterdam: Verloren Publishers, Rotterdam
Sen, S., (1999) Women and Labour in Late Colonial India: The Bengal Jute Industry, Cambrdige: Cambridge University Press
Ghosh, P., (2000) Colonialism, Class and a History of the Calcutta Jute Mill Hands, 1880-1930, Hyderabad: Sangam Books Ltd
Basu, S., (2004), Does Class Matter, Colonial capital and worker’s resistance in Bengal, 1890-1937, Oxford: Oxford University Press
Lenman, B., (1969), Dundee and Its Textile Industry 1850-1914, Dundee: Abertay Historical Society
Walker, W., (1979), Juteopolis. Dundee and its Textile Workers 1885-1923, Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press
Gordon, E., (1991), Women and the Labour Movement in Scotland, Oxford: Clarendon Press
Stewart, G.T., (1998), Jute and Empire: The Calcutta Jute Wallahs and the Landscapes of Empire, Manchester: Manchester University Press
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
This is an Open Access journal. All material is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence, unless otherwise stated.
Please read our Open Access, Copyright and Permissions policies for more information.