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"We Are in the Museum Now": Narrating and Representing Dock Work
[journal article]
Abstract Global developments like the introduction of the container since the 1960s strongly influenced work structures and spaces of action for dock workers. This article looks at the experiences of these workers and their positioning within this process. It presents some central findings of my PhD disserta... view more
Global developments like the introduction of the container since the 1960s strongly influenced work structures and spaces of action for dock workers. This article looks at the experiences of these workers and their positioning within this process. It presents some central findings of my PhD dissertation, an empirical study analysing the narrations of former Hamburg dock workers about spatial and socio-cultural transformations. Only a few years after the arrival of the container in Hamburg, skilled professions replaced traditional ones in order to secure container handling. These structural transformations led to better social and financial conditions of those able to continue their work and resulted in changed self-images of those pursuing a career. Besides the technical transformation, a parallel process of musealisation of dock work took place, documenting these developments. The involvement and commitment of former workers in the Harbour Museum further indicate a shift in the economic and cultural capital of some protagonists.... view less
Keywords
longshoreman; change of activity; structural change; reminiscence; narrative; museum; Hamburg; Federal Republic of Germany
Classification
Social History, Historical Social Research
Document language
English
Publication Year
2018
Page/Pages
p. 114-125
Journal
BIOS - Zeitschrift für Biographieforschung, Oral History und Lebensverlaufsanalysen, 31 (2018) 2
Issue topic
(Post-)Industrial Memories: Oral History and Structural Change
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3224/bios.v31i2.09
ISSN
2196-243X
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed