The story of the miners of Zonguldak presents a particularly graphic
local lens through which to examine questions that have been of major
concern to historians--most prominently, the development of the state,
the emergence of capitalism, and the role of the working classes in
these large processes. This book examines such major issues through the
actual experiences of coal miners in the Ottoman Empire. The encounters
of mine workers with state mining officials and private mine operators
do not follow the expected patterns of labor-state-capital relations as
predicted by the major explanatory paradigms of modernization or
dependency. Indeed, as the author clearly shows, few of the outcomes are
as predicted. The fate of these miners has much to offer both Ottoman
and Middle East specialists as well as scholars of the developing world
and, more generally, those interested in the connections between
economic development and social and political change.