A contemporary classic in Peru, where it was first published in
1986, this book explores changes in the political identity and
economic strategies of the Peruvian working class in the 1970s and
1980s. Jorge Parodi uses a case study of Metal Empresa, a large
factory in Lima, to trace the surge and decline of the labor
movement in Peru--and in Latin America more generally--through the
successes and frustrations of the members of a once-powerful union
as they coped with the nation's deteriorating economic
situation.
By the early 1970s, Metal Empresa was the site of one of the most
radical and aggressive unions in Peruvian industry. But as the
decade drew to a close, political and economic crises soured the
environment for trade unionism and rendered unions less able to
produce palpable benefits for their members. Through in-depth,
often poignant interviews, including an extensive oral history of
one of the workers, Jesus Zuniga, Parodi shows how workers
desperate to support themselves and their families were
increasingly forced to seek opportunities outside the industrial
sector. In the process, he shows, they began to question their very
identities as workers.