Class,  Patriarchy and Ethnicity on Sri Lankan Plantations takes as its  central theme the plantations of Sri Lanka, from their inception in the early  nineteenth century to almost the present day in the twenty-first. Drawing on a  wealth of archival material, it offers a detailed and compelling empirical  narrative of the lives and struggles of plantation workers, who have  constituted, for much of modern Sri Lankan history, the single largest  organised workforce in the country. In doing so, it explores the complex links  between power and class, gender and ethnic hierarchies both on the plantations  and outside and crucially situates the labour movement on the plantations  within the wider political and social economy of Sri Lanka. 
  The  current volume begins by tracing the origins of the plantations in then Ceylon,  the acquisition of Indian Tamil workers and the labour practices during the  colonial period. This in turn contextualises the subsequent discussion on  rising labour and political consciousness among plantation workers and their  struggles for labour and democratic rights, which the authors track through the  post-Independence period and into the twenty-first century. Particular attention  is paid to the role of political parties, trade unions and other pressure  groups in supporting or opposing these rights, within a background of class,  ethnic, linguistic and nationalist consciousness and chauvinism. The book  provides an astute analysis of the strategic alliances and political manoeuvres  made by the various actors in this struggle.
  This  volume offers readers a truly integrated history of the labour movement on Sri  Lankan plantations. It balances an empirically rich narrative with a nuanced  analysis of the class, ethnic, linguistic and political consciousness that has  informed and opposed the struggles of plantation labour on the island.