article

Injury and therapy: proletarianization in Puerto Rico's fisheries

American ethnologist19 (1) • Published In 1992 • Pages: 53-74

By: Griffith, David Craig, Valdés Pizzini, Manuel, Johnson, Jeffrey C..

Abstract
The authors assert that peasant fishermen throughout Latin American and the Caribbean region typically combine fishing with wage labor in varying degrees. This particular behavior has been interpreted by some scholars as an indication of incomplete incorporation into capitalist spheres of influence as the result of contradictions which "... emerge as groups attempt to maintain economic and cultural autonomy while being subordinated to capitalist relations of production" (p. 53). This article attempts to show how the political and conceptual consequences of this process take place among Puerto Rican fishermen. Griffith et al. conclude that the fishermen, as the result of their participation in the general economy, have utilized the terms of "class" and "therapy" and have adapted these concepts to the politics and semantics of fishing.
Subjects
Theoretical orientation in research and its results
Adjustment processes
Life history materials
Functional and adaptational interpretations
Fishing
Production and supply
Labor supply and employment
Ownership and control of capital
Cooperative organization
culture
Puerto Ricans (Island)
HRAF PubDate
2012
Region
Middle America and the Caribbean
Sub Region
Caribbean
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle; 1993, 2012
Field Date
no date
Coverage Date
1987-1989
Coverage Place
Puerto Rico
Notes
[by] David Griffith, Manuel Valdés Pizzini, Jeffrey C. Johnson
LCCN
74644326
LCSH
Puerto Rico--Fishing