PART I: INTRODUCTION The poli...
PART I: INTRODUCTION The political autobiography of the recent British worker reveals that he usually regarded himself in a capitalist nation as common among myriad "atoms," part of a homogenous and segregated population that was to be channeled into a productive labor force. As as it was he felt trapped in a body that did not prevent his slope into abject poverty, however prohibited upward mobility. Not surprisingly, a sensation of deprivation, isolation, and insignificance informed his life writing. As Regenia Gagnier points disclosed whether "politicians" or "story
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