The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and Mumbai

Abstract This article examines the evolution of mill districts in Shanghai and Mumbai across the 20th century as cases of political heritage—in which the socio-spatial formations of factory and neighbourhood produced new meanings of citizenship for the workers in each city. Using historical material...

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Main Author: Mark W. Frazier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-09-01
Series:Built Heritage
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/BF03545744
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spelling doaj-bf36ec3f671b493188cc07a7be7075cf2020-11-25T03:25:26ZengSpringerOpenBuilt Heritage2096-30412662-68022019-09-0133627510.1186/BF03545744The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and MumbaiMark W. Frazier0Department of Politics, The New School for Social ResearchAbstract This article examines the evolution of mill districts in Shanghai and Mumbai across the 20th century as cases of political heritage—in which the socio-spatial formations of factory and neighbourhood produced new meanings of citizenship for the workers in each city. Using historical materials from the textile industry in each city, government reports, housing data, and secondary sources, this article first traces the origins of Shanghai’s textile industry in the 19th century to its connections with Bombay’s textile mills, then examines the emergence of working-class neighbourhoods as they acquired distinctive patterns of tenement housing, shopfronts, and street life. The main finding is that despite clear differences in the two cities in terms of religion, culture, and politics, the ‘mill district’ became a socio-cultural formation central to the identity and memory of generations of textile workers in Shanghai and Mumbai. A concluding section examines the similar process in each city in the 21st century in which mill compounds and neighbourhoods were converted into high-end commercial real estate and sites for consumption and leisure.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/BF03545744industrial heritagepolitical heritage textile industryurban housingcitizenshipMumbai historyShanghai history
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark W. Frazier
spellingShingle Mark W. Frazier
The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and Mumbai
Built Heritage
industrial heritage
political heritage textile industry
urban housing
citizenship
Mumbai history
Shanghai history
author_facet Mark W. Frazier
author_sort Mark W. Frazier
title The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and Mumbai
title_short The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and Mumbai
title_full The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and Mumbai
title_fullStr The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and Mumbai
title_full_unstemmed The Political Heritage of Textile Districts: Shanghai and Mumbai
title_sort political heritage of textile districts: shanghai and mumbai
publisher SpringerOpen
series Built Heritage
issn 2096-3041
2662-6802
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract This article examines the evolution of mill districts in Shanghai and Mumbai across the 20th century as cases of political heritage—in which the socio-spatial formations of factory and neighbourhood produced new meanings of citizenship for the workers in each city. Using historical materials from the textile industry in each city, government reports, housing data, and secondary sources, this article first traces the origins of Shanghai’s textile industry in the 19th century to its connections with Bombay’s textile mills, then examines the emergence of working-class neighbourhoods as they acquired distinctive patterns of tenement housing, shopfronts, and street life. The main finding is that despite clear differences in the two cities in terms of religion, culture, and politics, the ‘mill district’ became a socio-cultural formation central to the identity and memory of generations of textile workers in Shanghai and Mumbai. A concluding section examines the similar process in each city in the 21st century in which mill compounds and neighbourhoods were converted into high-end commercial real estate and sites for consumption and leisure.
topic industrial heritage
political heritage textile industry
urban housing
citizenship
Mumbai history
Shanghai history
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/BF03545744
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