When C. Wright Mills published The New Men of Power in 1948, he
thought labor leaders a new strategic elite and the unions a set of
vanguard organizations that were crucial to "stopping the main
drift towards war and slump." Today, as the unions once again seek
to play a decisive role in American life, Mills' remarkable probe
into the structure and ideology of mid-twentieth-century trade
unionism remains essential reading. A new introduction by historian
Nelson Lichtenstein offers insight into the Millsian political
world at the time he wrote The New Men of Power.
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