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The Education Myth questions the idea that education represents the
best, if not the only, way for Americans to access economic
opportunity. As Jon Shelton shows, linking education to economic
well-being was not politically inevitable. In the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, for instance, public education was championed
as a way to help citizens learn how to participate in a democracy.
By the 1930s, public education, along with union rights and social
security, formed an important component of a broad-based fight for
social democracy. Shelton demonstrates that beginning in the 1960s,
the political power of the education myth choked off powerful
social democratic alternatives like A. Philip Randolph and Bayard
Rustin's Freedom Budget. The nation's political center was bereft
of any realistic ideas to guarantee economic security and social
dignity for the majority of Americans, particularly those without
college degrees. Embraced first by Democrats like Lyndon Johnson,
Jimmy Carter, and Bill Clinton, Republicans like George W. Bush
also pushed the education myth. The result, over the past four
decades, has been the emergence of a deeply inequitable economy and
a drastically divided political system.
From white-collar executives to mail carriers, public workers meet
the needs of the entire nation. Frederick W. Gooding Jr. and Eric
S. Yellin edit a collection of new research on this understudied
workforce. Part One begins in the late nineteenth- and early
twentieth century to explore how questions of race, class, and
gender shaped public workers, their workplaces, and their place in
American democracy. In Part Two, essayists examine race and gender
discrimination while revealing the subtle contemporary forms of
marginalization that keep Black men and Black and white women
underpaid and overlooked for promotion. The historic labor actions
detailed in Part Three illuminate how city employees organized not
only for better pay and working conditions but to seek recognition
from city officials, the public, and the national labor movement.
Part Four focuses on nurses and teachers to address the thorny
question of whether certain groups deserve premium pay for their
irreplaceable work and sacrifices or if serving the greater good is
a reward unto itself. Contributors: Eileen Boris, Cathleen D.
Cahill, Frederick W. Gooding Jr., William P. Jones, Francis Ryan,
Jon Shelton, Joseph E. Slater, Katherine Turk, Eric S. Yellin, and
Amy Zanoni
From white-collar executives to mail carriers, public workers meet
the needs of the entire nation. Frederick W. Gooding Jr. and Eric
S. Yellin edit a collection of new research on this understudied
workforce. Part One begins in the late nineteenth- and early
twentieth century to explore how questions of race, class, and
gender shaped public workers, their workplaces, and their place in
American democracy. In Part Two, essayists examine race and gender
discrimination while revealing the subtle contemporary forms of
marginalization that keep Black men and Black and white women
underpaid and overlooked for promotion. The historic labor actions
detailed in Part Three illuminate how city employees organized not
only for better pay and working conditions but to seek recognition
from city officials, the public, and the national labor movement.
Part Four focuses on nurses and teachers to address the thorny
question of whether certain groups deserve premium pay for their
irreplaceable work and sacrifices or if serving the greater good is
a reward unto itself. Contributors: Eileen Boris, Cathleen D.
Cahill, Frederick W. Gooding Jr., William P. Jones, Francis Ryan,
Jon Shelton, Joseph E. Slater, Katherine Turk, Eric S. Yellin, and
Amy Zanoni
A wave of teacher strikes in the 1960s and 1970s roiled urban
communities. Jon Shelton illuminates how this tumultuous era helped
shatter the liberal-labor coalition and opened the door to the
neoliberal challenge at the heart of urban education today. As
Shelton shows, many working- and middle-class whites sided with
corporate interests in seeing themselves as society's only
legitimate, productive members. This alliance increasingly argued
that public employees and the urban poor took but did not give.
Drawing on a wealth of research ranging from school board meetings
to TV news reports, Shelton puts readers in the middle of fraught,
intense strikes in Newark, St. Louis, and three other cities where
these debates and shifting attitudes played out. He also
demonstrates how the labor actions contributed to the growing
public perception of unions as irrelevant or even detrimental to
American prosperity. Foes of the labor movement, meanwhile, tapped
into cultural and economic fears to undermine not just teacher
unionism but the whole of liberalism.
A wave of teacher strikes in the 1960s and 1970s roiled urban
communities. Jon Shelton illuminates how this tumultuous era helped
shatter the liberal-labor coalition and opened the door to the
neoliberal challenge at the heart of urban education today. As
Shelton shows, many working- and middle-class whites sided with
corporate interests in seeing themselves as society's only
legitimate, productive members. This alliance increasingly argued
that public employees and the urban poor took but did not give.
Drawing on a wealth of research ranging from school board meetings
to TV news reports, Shelton puts readers in the middle of fraught,
intense strikes in Newark, St. Louis, and three other cities where
these debates and shifting attitudes played out. He also
demonstrates how the labor actions contributed to the growing
public perception of unions as irrelevant or even detrimental to
American prosperity. Foes of the labor movement, meanwhile, tapped
into cultural and economic fears to undermine not just teacher
unionism but the whole of liberalism.
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