Être un ouvrier à l'usine en 1970 🏭 | INA Société

Subscribe http://bit.ly/inasociete 🔔 Turn on notifications 🔔 Living Together | A2 | 04/16/1970 This magazine explores the world of the factory, where thousands of men work eight hours a day. It examines factories where designers, architects, sociologists, and engineers, working with teams, have transformed the workers' usual environment. "Is this how modern industrial society poses the problems of the new environment?" Is changing the walls and the methods enough to change people's lives? The report is divided into three parts. "The Inside and the Outside," a report by Colette Djidou and Victoria Llanso, focuses on a sugar refinery employing 1,200 workers in northern France (Beghin). Following a takeover, the factory is redesigned by a designer. A report that alternates between interviews with the factory manager and interviews with the workers. The workers being interviewed are never seen. We hear them over images of the factory and the workers at work. FEYZIN, a report by Claude OTZENBERGER and Marcel TRILLAT: About the work of the refinery (Elf) workers in FEYZIN. Alternating interviews with the manager, Mr. BASCH, and the factory workers, some of whom are subcontractors. A sign in the garden of a house near the refinery reads: "Dead end of death and despair, silence, oil has claimed lives." Interview with a young worker who criticizes the poor working conditions. IN GOSSELIES, An American Dream, a report by Daniel KARLIN and Jacques FREMONTIER: In this region, the mines are closing one after another. In 1967, an American civil engineering company was established (2,500 new jobs). The report alternates between interviews with company executives, the public relations director, Mr. Baudoux, Mr. Lop (who helped establish the work schedules), Mr. Wercler (the company director), and factory workers to create a contrasting portrait of the company. 🔎 CALL FOR WITNESSES: Do you recognize yourself or someone you know in one of our archives? Don't hesitate to write to us at: [email protected] 🔍 ***** Information about comments ***** On YouTube channels, you are free to express your opinion, even if it is critical. To ensure the quality of the discussion, however, we ask that you always remain calm, polite, and respectful of other commenters. Proselytizing, vulgar, aggressive, or disrespectful remarks toward any person or group are prohibited. Any insulting or defamatory comment will be deleted. We reserve the right to ban any user who does not respect the community rules. ****************************************************************** INA archive footage National Audiovisual Institute http://www.ina.fr #INA #Society