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Rebecca Prentice

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Stephen Acabado (University of California, Los Angeles)

Koh Keng We (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)

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The University Press of Colorado is accepting manuscripts for publication in our Global Colonialism series, a collection of nonfiction books that investigate the effects of colonialism globally on both colonizers and the colonized. Books in the series will be selected from across a variety of fields, including archaeology, anthropology, ethnohistory, and history.

Conquest and colonization have characterized the human experience from the time of the emergence of state-level societies. We invite global case studies, from the earliest known examples in antiquity to the current day, as well as more synthetic works that study the ties between areas connected by colonialism. Books in this series should study colonial processes at a local level, while also examining how these processes connect to larger spheres and themes.

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Rebecca Prentice

Rebecca Prentice is a lecturer in anthropology at the University of Sussex in Brighton, UK. Her research on garment workers in Trinidad was funded by the Wenner-Gren Foundation, the Economic and Social Research Council (UK), and the Royal Anthropological Institute.

Thiefing a Chance

Factory Work, Illicit Labor, and Neoliberal Subjectivities in Trinidad

Thiefing a Chance, by Rebecca Prentice, wins the 2015 Society for the Anthropology of Work Book Prize!

Press release from the Society for the Anthropology of Work Book Prize Committee, American Anthropological Association

The book prize committee of the Society for the Anthropology of Work has selected Rebecca Prentice's Thiefing A Chance: Factory Work, Illicit Labor, and Neoliberal Subjectivities in Trinidad (University Press of Colorado) as the 2015 winner.

The study stands out for its detailed descriptions of work in the production of high-end fashions for the regional clothing market. The author worked alongside the women in the factory, learning how they were 'into the sewing' (proud of their skills) as they seized the time, materials, designs, and techniques for making clothing to sell on their own. Reflecting the Trinidadian ethic of thiefing a chance, 'these illicit activities are uniquely valorized, not as "everyday resistance" to the hegemonic interests of employers but instead as the embodiment of an enterprising ethos.'

Richly contextualized ethnographically, this bottom-up approach to neoliberal economic development builds on previous research in the anthropology of work, especially on women's employment in assembly plants and on the importance of race, ethnicity, and class in the history of Caribbean labor formations.

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