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National Construction of Occupational Identity: Jewish Clerks in British-Ruled Palestine
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2012
Extract
This essay addresses the relationship between white-collar workers and nationalism by introducing a cultural-symbolic approach to examine how national discourse became an essential “point of production” of white-collar identities, particularly those of clerks and clerical work. Based on an analysis of the imagery that clerks use to describe their work experience, this discussion attempts to document and explain how and why nationalism, as a cultural system with an internal logic and specific stylistic devices, was employed by the clerks “from below” to construct their occupational identity.
The association between white-collar workers and nationalism, particularly in the context of state building, has long attracted the attention of sociologists and historians. First, the emergence of non-manual workers as the social basis of bureaucratic organizations was linked to state formation. Second, the role of white-collar workers in the evolution of national-capitalist economies and urban consumer communities was regarded as essential in linking state building and economic change. Third, political and social histories of the nationalist Right centered on bureaucrats and clerical employees as standard-bearers of conservative politics.
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- Occupational Identity
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- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1997
References
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21 Din Ve-Cheshbon Shel Histadrut Hu-Pekidim [Report by the Union of Clerks], 1925–1927; and Divrei Ha-Kinus Ha-Artsi Ha-Rishon Shel Pekidei Batei Mischar [Minutes of The First National Assembly of Commercial Clerks] (Tel Aviv, May 1938)Google Scholar.
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24 Tazkir Histadrut Ha-Pekidim Be-Eretz Israel La-Va'ad Ha-Tsirim Ue-La-Va'ad Ha-Poel Shel Ha-Va'ad Ha-Yehudi Ha-Zemani [Memorandum of the Clerks' Union of Palestine to the Jewish Delegates' Committee and the Executive of the Jewish Temporary Committee], February 1919. LA/IV-143-1: A. Globman, “Ovdei Tenua o' Avdei Misrad” [Movement Workers or Office Slaves], Pinkas. (March 1, 1930), 3–6; Histadrut Ha-Pekidim, Senif Cheifa, Bulletin, (January 1931), 1–4: Histadrut Ha-Pekidim. Din Ve-Cheshbon La-Ve'ida Ha-Revi'it Shel Hci-Histadrut Ha-Klalit [Union of Clerks Report to the Fourth General Convention of the Histadrut] (1932); Baki, M., “Lekach Echad Mini Rabim” [One Lesson of Many], Pinkas, 9–10 (October 1936), 4–7Google Scholar; “Be-Ikvot Ha-Yamim” [Following the Days], Shurot, 2 (August 1938), 1Google Scholar.
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29 For the Singer affair, see Din Ve-Cheshbon La-Ve'ida Ha-Shlishit Shel Ha-Hisldrut HaKlalit [Report to the Third Histadrut Convention] (1927), 59–60; for the 1946 strike, see Shurot, February–November, 1946; and Be-Mivchan Ha-Ma'aseh.
30 Hachlatot Mo'etset Histadrul Ha-Pekidim [Resolutions of the Council of the Clerks' Union] (December 17–19, 1931), in Din Ve-Cheshbon. Shel Histantt Ha-Pekidim La-Ve'ida HaRevi'it Shel Ha-Histadrut Ha-Klalit [Union of Clerks' Report to the Histadrut Fourth General Convention] (1933), 26–29. The term “Public [Mass or Community] of Workers” was the labor movement's common substitute for class and was based on communal self-descriptions of the Jewish community in the Diaspora.
31 Pekidut referred to clerking and avoda misradit to office work. One writer of Shurot, the bulletin of the clerks' union and one of the best guides to clerks' discourse, gave himself the pen name of Misradai, thus creating an identity between the clerk and his workplace. This was quite common: construction union activists named themselves banai, builder; and industrial workers signed their names as poel-charoshet (industrial worker). Pseudonyms also protected individuals from the reaction of the authorities.
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45 For the struggle against cuts in Zionist national institutions, see for example LA/IV-236-2-227.
46 Gavrielli, Ch., “Ha-Politika Ha-Ta'arifit Shel Histadrut Ha-Pekidim” [The Tariff Politics of the Clerks' Union], Choveret Le-lnianei Ha-Pekidim (Tishrei 5689) [September 1928], 14Google Scholar.
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48 On “cushioning devices.” see for example LA/IV-250-72-1-3215 and LA/IV-236-1-104.
49 This ambiguity is reflected in the relations between the Haifa Labor Council and the local branch of the clerks' union. See LA/IV-236-1-118 and 119. For the dual loyalty, see Repetor, B., “Ha-Pakid Be-Tenu'at Ha-Avoda” (The Clerk in the Labor Movement), Pinkas, 11–12 (February 1937), 9Google Scholar: and LA/IV-236-1-84.
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