Abstract
The study presented here examines the subjective relationship of workers to their work in the historical context. More specifically, it looks at the influence of the transatlantic slave trade on behaviours that have been transmitted across generations on the island of Guadeloupe (French West Indies) and have resulted in collective defence strategies used by today’s workers. These are examined through historical documents and by means of interviews with a psychodynamic approach. The observed elaboration of defence strategies in the context of paid work in Guadeloupe could, thus, partially be the result of the combined effects of the habits formed during the period of slavery and the ascription (as explained by Jean Laplanche’s theory of translation) that happens in the context of the family.
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Notes
Subjectivity, 8, 2015.
Some examples of resistant and disobedient behaviours we observed: (a) work to rule, applying procedures mechanically, without making any effort to reduce the gap between the rule and reality; (b) showing insubordination towards more or less obvious hierarchical authority (not listening, not paying attention, not talking to the management; acquiescing but ignoring their instructions, undoing work done by the management if it does not suit the employee); (c) work stoppages, absences, non-compliance with schedules, manifest lack of interest in work.
We should point out that, obviously, a business is not a family. There is a symbolic resonance between professional life and personal life, but they are not necessarily aligned; professional life represents “an-other scene”, where what was impossible during childhood becomes possible.
In this social hierarchy created by slavery and colonisation, the dominant position is occupied by the Whites and the dominated position by the Blacks (nègre) (see Michel 2020).
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Associate Professor (Maître de conférences) in Psychology of Work at the Université Sorbonne Paris Nord. Member of the Cross-sectional Research Unit Psychogenesis and Psychopathology (UTRPP), UR 4403, Villetaneuse, France. Associated Researcher, University of Paris, Clinical Psychology, Psychopathology, Psychoanalysis (PCPP), UR 4056 Boulogne-Billancourt, France.
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Ganem, V. The legacy of slavery, subjectivity and work: intergenerational transmission and the subjective relationship to work in Guadeloupe. Subjectivity 30, 185–203 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1057/s41286-023-00160-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41286-023-00160-z