Working-Class New York

Working-Class New York
Author: Joshua B. Freeman
Publisher: The New Press
Total Pages: 436
Release: 2021-04-20
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1620977087

A “lucid, detailed, and imaginative analysis” (The Nation) of the model city that working-class New Yorkers created after World War II—and its tragic demise More than any other city in America, New York in the years after the Second World War carved out an idealistic and equitable path to the future. Largely through the efforts of its working class and the dynamic labor movement it built, New York City became the envied model of liberal America and the scourge of conservatives everywhere: cheap and easy-to-use mass transit, work in small businesses and factories that had good wages and benefits, affordable public housing, and healthcare for all. Working-Class New York is an “engrossing” (Dissent) account of the birth of that ideal and the way it came crashing down. In what Publishers Weekly calls “absorbing and beautifully detailed history,” historian Joshua Freeman shows how the anticommunist purges of the 1950s decimated the ranks of the labor movement and demoralized its idealists, and how the fiscal crisis of the mid-1970s dealt another crushing blow to liberal ideals as the city’s wealthy elite made a frenzied grab for power. A grand work of cultural and social history, Working-Class New York is a moving chronicle of a dream that died but may yet rise again.

Labor's Mind

Labor's Mind
Author: Tobias Higbie
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2018-12-30
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0252051092

Business leaders, conservative ideologues, and even some radicals of the early twentieth century dismissed working people's intellect as stunted, twisted, or altogether missing. They compared workers toiling in America's sprawling factories to animals, children, and robots. Working people regularly defied these expectations, cultivating the knowledge of experience and embracing a vibrant subculture of self-education and reading. Labor's Mind uses diaries and personal correspondence, labor college records, and a range of print and visual media to recover this social history of the working-class mind. As Higbie shows, networks of working-class learners and their middle-class allies formed nothing less than a shadow labor movement. Dispersed across the industrial landscape, this movement helped bridge conflicts within radical and progressive politics even as it trained workers for the transformative new unionism of the 1930s. Revelatory and sympathetic, Labor's Mind reclaims a forgotten chapter in working-class intellectual life while mapping present-day possibilities for labor, higher education, and digitally enabled self-study.

Learning to Labor

Learning to Labor
Author: Paul E. Willis
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1981
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780231053570

Claims the rebellion of poor and working class children against school authority prepares them for working class jobs.

Life and Labor on the Border

Life and Labor on the Border
Author: Josiah McConnell Heyman
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 268
Release: 1991
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780816512256

Traces the development over the past hundred years of the urban working class in northern Sonora. Drawing on an extensive collection of life histories, Heyman describes what has happened to families over several generations as people left the countryside to work for American-owned companies in northern Sonora or to cross the border to find other employment.

The Half-Life of Deindustrialization

The Half-Life of Deindustrialization
Author: Sherry Lee Linkon
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 219
Release: 2018-03-23
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0472053795

Examines how contemporary American working- class literature reveals the long- term effects of deindustrialization on individuals and communities

Labour and working-class lives

Labour and working-class lives
Author: Keith Laybourn
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 425
Release: 2017-04-30
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1526100118

British labour history has been one of the dominating areas of historical research in the last sixty years and this book, written in honour of Professor Chris Wrigley, offers a collection of essays written by leading British labour historians of that subject including Ken Brown, Malcolm Chase and Matthew Worley. It focuses upon trade unionism, the co-operative movement, the rise and fall of the Labour Party, and working-class lives, comparing British labour movements with those in Germany and examining the social and political labour activities of the Lansburys. There is, indeed, some important work connected with the cultural developments of the British labour movement, most obviously in the essay written by Matthew Worley on communism and Punk Rock.

Working People in Alberta

Working People in Alberta
Author: Alvin Finkel
Publisher: Athabasca University Press
Total Pages: 361
Release: 2012
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1926836588

A political and economic analysis of the history of working people in Alberta.

Stayin' Alive

Stayin' Alive
Author: Jefferson R. Cowie
Publisher: ReadHowYouWant.com
Total Pages: 426
Release: 2011-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 1459604237

An epic account of how working-class America hit the rocks in the political and economic upheavals of the '70s, Stayin' Alive is a wide-ranging cultural and political history that presents the decade in a whole new light. Jefferson Cowie's edgy and incisive book - part political intrigue, part labor history, with large doses of American music, film, and TV lore - makes new sense of the '70s as a crucial and poorly understood transition from the optimism of New Deal America to the widening economic inequalities and dampened expectations of the present. Stayin' Alive takes us from the factory floors of Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Detroit to the Washington of Nixon, Ford, and Carter. Cowie connects politics to culture, showing how the big screen and the jukebox can help us understand how America turned away from the radicalism of the '60s and toward the patriotic promise of Ronald Reagan. He also makes unexpected connections between the secrets of the Nixon White House and the failings of the George McGovern campaign, between radicalism and the blue-collar backlash, and between the earthy twang of Merle Haggard's country music and the falsetto highs of Saturday Night Fever. Cowie captures nothing less than the defining characteristics of a new era. Stayin' Alive is a book that will forever define a misunderstood decade.

Factory Lives

Factory Lives
Author: James R. Simmons, Jr
Publisher: Broadview Press
Total Pages: 500
Release: 2007-04-10
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 146040341X

Factory Lives contains four works of great importance in the field of nineteenth-century working-class autobiography: John Brown’s A Memoir of Robert Blincoe; William Dodd’s A Narrative of the Experience and Sufferings of William Dodd; Ellen Johnston’s “Autobiography”; and James Myles’s Chapters in the Life of a Dundee Factory Boy. This Broadview edition also includes a remarkably rich selection of historical documents that provide context for these works. Appendices include contemporary responses to the autobiographies, debates on factory legislation, transcripts of testimony given before parliamentary committees on child labour, and excerpts from literary works on factory life by Harriet Martineau, Frances Trollope, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, among others.

The Fall of the House of Labor

The Fall of the House of Labor
Author: David Montgomery
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 510
Release: 1987
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780521379823

This book studies the changing ways in which American industrial workers mobilised concerted action in their own interests between the abolition of slavery and the end of open immigration from Europe and Asia. Sustained class conflict between 1916 and 1922 reshaped governmental and business policies, but left labour largely unorganised and in retreat. The House of Labor, so arduously erected by working-class activists during the preceeding generation, did not collapse, but ossified, so that when labour activism was reinvigorated after 1933, the movement split in two. These developments are analysed here in ways which stress the links between migration, neighbourhood life, racial subjugation, business reform, the state, and the daily experience of work itself.