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Chapter 8 - Beyond the Coalfields: The Work of the Miners’ Support Groups (1985)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 August 2023

Brett Christophers
Affiliation:
Uppsala Universitet, Sweden
Rebecca Lave
Affiliation:
Indiana University, Bloomington
Jamie Peck
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
Marion Werner
Affiliation:
State University of New York, Buffalo
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Summary

The miners’ strike seems to epitomize those aspects of the labour movement and class politics that certain interpreters have found ‘old fashioned’, sectional and, by implication, bankrupt. Male manual workers, the old working class with a vengeance, fighting to save jobs in what is officially described as a declining industry, stateowned and located in isolated declining regions. And yet around this struggle a massive support movement has grown up – almost unreported – with as broad a social and geographical base as any post-war radical political movement.

THE COALFIELDS

The social structure of the mining communities reflects the industry which is their livelihood: lack of white-collar jobs, their proletarian nature, the overwhelming dominance of male, manual labour. The regions are distinctive in other ways too. They are predominantly white; they are socially conservative; traditional sexual divisions of labour – woman as homemaker, man as bread-winner – have been deeply ingrained and only recently begun to break down.

Their politics have been workplace-based. They are the fiefdoms of one of the most important unions in labour movement history, symbolizing – at least for men – the old strengths of a solidarity born of mutual dependence at work, and the reliance of a whole community on a single industry. The themes of discipline and collectivism run deep and strong in the political atmosphere. These are regions owned, regulated, fed and watered by the central state. The industry is nationalized, high proportions of the inhabitants live on state subsidies, and for an alternative to work in the pit they appeal to state regional policy. They have voted Labour for years, through thick and (mainly) thin. And the local state, for ages too, has been in the hands of the Labour Party right wing. They are the heartlands of labourism. What this means is that the strike is taking place in some of the most self-enclosed and socially homogeneous regions of the country. And indeed that geography is part of the rationale and the character of the strike. The one-to-one relationship between community and coal, at least for male employment, has been one of the bases of its solidarity.

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Publisher: Agenda Publishing
Print publication year: 2018

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