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Smokestacks in the Hills - Rural-Industrial Workers in West Virginia (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,348
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Smokestacks in the Hills - Rural-Industrial Workers in West Virginia (Hardcover)
Series: Working Class in American History
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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Long considered an urban phenomenon, industrialization also
transformed the American countryside. Lou Martin weaves the
narrative of how the relocation of steel and pottery factories to
Hancock County, West Virginia, created a rural and small-town
working class--and what that meant for communities and for labor.
As Martin shows, access to land in and around steel and pottery
towns allowed residents to preserve rural habits and culture.
Workers in these places valued place and local community. Because
of their belief in localism, an individualistic ethic of "making
do," and company loyalty, they often worked to place limits on
union influence. At the same time, this localism allowed workers to
adapt to the dictates of industrial capitalism and a continually
changing world on their own terms--and retain rural ways to a
degree unknown among their urbanized peers. Throughout, Martin ties
these themes to illuminating discussions of capital mobility, the
ways in which changing work experiences defined gender roles, and
the persistent myth that modernizing forces bulldozed docile local
cultures. Revealing and incisive, Smokestacks in the Hills
reappraises an overlooked stratum of American labor history and
contributes to the ongoing dialogue on shifts in national politics
in the postwar era.
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