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Cultural Context and Contractual Relations: The Madras Planters' Labour Law and the Rise of the Plantation Maistri, 1904–1927
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2009
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In examining the development of colonial capitalism in India historians have increasingly recognized the importance of specific cultural contexts in determining the character of the emergent industrial sector. In particular, the impact of pre-capitalist mores on the recruitment, organization and supervision of industrial workers has been an important concern. In the Calcutta jute industry, for instance, Dipesh Chakrabarty has concluded that the authority of factory sardars was derived largely from a pre-capitalist culture with “a strong emphasis on religion, community, kinship, language, and other similar loyalties”. Similarly, Ranajit Das Gupta's exploration of the industrial labour market in north eastern India has revealed that “indebtedness, primordial loyalties and relations of personal dependency were extensively used to keep labour under control”. Studies of trade union development have also acknowledged the enduring importance of the cultural milieu carried by workers to the mills, mines and plantations of colonial India.
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References
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9 The Madras Planters' Labour Law, Clause 10.
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78 The standard government seer of 2.057 lbs has been employed throughout the text. In the imperial system of weights 1.4 seers is equal to 2lbs 140z, and to 1.3 kilos in the metric system. It is important to note that female wages were approximately two thirds that of their male counterparts both in money terms and in grain purchasing power. In the Nilgiri adult female labour was at least as common as adult male labour. (R.E.C.L.P.I., op. cit., p. 115.) Since the earnings of young children were negligible on estates, a woman who had dependents but no adult male to contribute to the support of her family was most vulnerable to any decline in real wages.
79 Reports M.P.L.L., 1921, G.O. No. 585, G.W. Wells, Acting Collector of the Nilgiris, to Secretary to Government, Home (Miscellaneous) Department, 15 March 1921.
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105 Ibid., p. 140.
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110 Ibid., pp. 376, 383.
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112 Ibid., 1914, G.O. No. 589, M. Young, District Magistrate, Nilgiris, to Chief Secretary to Government, 14th Feb. 1914.
113 Report of R.C.L.I., op. cit., Recommendations.
114 R.C.L.I., Evidence, Vol. VII, op. cit., Part II, p. 206.Google Scholar
115 Ibid., pp. 215, 318.
116 Ibid., p. 371.
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