账簿上的达亚克人:婆罗洲劳工史和一个石油城的土著工人

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY International Labor and Working-Class History Pub Date : 2023-02-02 DOI:10.1017/S0147547922000229
Sridevi Menon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文描述了迄今为止被掩盖的婆罗洲西北油田的劳动历史。2018年,文莱壳牌石油公司(BSP)采取了一项前所未有的举措,向文莱国家档案馆公布了英国马来亚石油公司(BMPC于1958年更名为BSP)的两份劳工登记册,其条目可追溯到20世纪40年代至50年代。这些登记册为被招募到文莱油田担任劳工的工人提供了罕见的一瞥,这一类别与员工不同。作为BMPC的劳工,他们致力于修复公司城镇和油田,这些城镇和油田在第二次世界大战期间被日本军队和盟军在英国保护国文莱的轰炸摧毁。就像为殖民地主体的控制和统治收集信息的殖民地记录一样,BMPC账本中的每一项都仔细记录了雇佣日期、工作地点、工资、工作史,以及一些工人的传记信息。无意中,这些条目还揭示了工人抵抗和代理主张的模式,从而让我们得以一窥BMPC在这个殖民前哨的政策所塑造的劳工历史的隐藏记录。我的文章借鉴了这两个BMPC劳动力登记册,追溯了婆罗洲新兴油田“达亚克”劳动力的微观空间历史。这些登记册经常在历史记录中被掩盖,使土著工人谈判和抵制公司对劳动力控制的方式显而易见。我在19世纪80年代至1941年代的背景下探索了达亚克的劳动力招聘,当时国家边界发生了不可逆转的变化,地区经济越来越多地被吸引到全球市场。在这样做的过程中,我绘制了婆罗洲西北部不同地区经济体的移民劳动力路线图,BMPC对多民族劳动力的管理,以及公司工人代理机构。
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Dayaks in a Ledger: A Bornean Labor History and an Oil Town's Indigenous Workers
Abstract This article delineates a hitherto eclipsed labor history of the Northwest Borneo oilfields. In 2018, Brunei Shell Petroleum (BSP) in an unprecedented move, released to Brunei's national archive two labor registers of the British Malayan Petroleum Company (BMPC-renamed BSP in 1958), with entries dating between the 1940s and 1950s. These registers provided a rare glimpse of the workers who were recruited to the Brunei oilfields as labor, a category distinct from staff. As BMPC labor they worked to rehabilitate the company town and the oilfields that were destroyed during the Second World War by the Japanese army and allied bombing in the British protectorate of Brunei. Like colonial records that amassed information for the control and rule of colonized subjects, each entry in BMPC's ledger meticulously noted the date of engagement, place of employment, wages, work history, as well as some biographical information about its workers. Inadvertently, these entries also revealed modes of worker resistance and assertions of agency, thus providing a glimpse of the hidden transcripts of a labor history shaped by the policies of BMPC in this colonial outpost. My article draws on these two BMPC labor registers to trace a micro-spatial history of “Dayak” labor in the emergent Borneo oilfields. Often obscured in historical records, the registers made visible the ways in which Indigenous workers negotiated and resisted the company's control of its labor force. I explore Dayak labor recruitment within the context of the 1880s-1941 when state borders irrevocably shifted and regional economies were increasingly drawn into a global market. In doing so, I chart migrant labor routes across varied regional economies in Northwest Borneo, BMPC's management of a multiethnic labor force, and company workers' agency.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
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期刊介绍: ILWCH has an international reputation for scholarly innovation and quality. It explores diverse topics from globalisation and workers’ rights to class and consumption, labour movements, class identities and cultures, unions, and working-class politics. ILWCH publishes original research, review essays, conference reports from around the world, and an acclaimed scholarly controversy section. Comparative and cross-disciplinary, the journal is of interest to scholars in history, sociology, political science, labor studies, global studies, and a wide range of other fields and disciplines. Published for International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc.
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