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Title | Xin gong ren |
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Content | [2004 songs]. Da sheng chang : ge qu ji / Nong you zhi jia/Da gong qing nian yi shu tuan -- [2006 songs 1]. Da gong qing nian yi shu tuan ge qu zuo pin xuan / Gong you zhi jia -- Zong di 1 qi (2009). Di yi jie da gong wen hua yi shu jie zhuan kan ; [supplement 1] di yi jie da gong wen hua yi shu jie min yao shi ge zuo pin ji -- zong di 2 qi (2010). Di er jie xin gong ren wen hua yi shu jie zhuan kan ; [supplement 2] di er jie da gong wen hua yi shu jie min yao shi ge zuo pin ji -- zong di 3 qi (2010). Dao nian fu shi kang gong you zhuan kan ; [supplement 3] di san jie xin gong ren wen hua yi shu jie: zun yan, lao dong zhe de shi yu ge. |
Translated title | New workers |
Creator/other | Tong xin gong you wen xue she |
Shelfmark | SINOL. UNPO.208 |
Subject (topical) | Working class writings, Chinese |
Subject (geographic) | China |
Subject (temporal) | 1900-2099 |
Note | The New Worker / The New Worker Journal is one of several publications initiated by rural-to-urban migrant workers in postsocialist China. Poetry is the most prominent genre in this literature at large and is emphatically present in The New Worker as well. The journal was published at the Migrant Workers Home (or Work-Mates-Home, formerly the Peasant-Mates-Home), an NGO based in Picun in the outskirts of Beijing that engages in cultural education as a means toward the advancement of workers’ rights. The publication takes its name from the expression “the New Worker” as the NGO’s preferred appellation for China’s precarious workers. The Home’s publications exemplify how unofficial publishing establishes lateral linkage between divergent types of cultural production, from elite to subaltern. |
Language | Chinese |
Country | China |
Extent | electronic resource |
Published/created | 北京 : 同心工友文学社, 2004- |
Persistent URL | |
Published (digital) | Leiden University Libraries, |