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The essays in this volume focus on the role of women in the work
force. They explore how organized sports, social associations of
all kinds and the educational system faced by the children of
worker were profoundly linked to work place and community activism.
They examine why radical labor organizations that could win major
strikes often could not sustain themselves as permanent
institutions. Finally, the essays argue that simultaneous
leadership changes in management and labor in the auto industry
were less the result of internal conflicts than needed structural
adjustments to changing economic and political realities.
Interwoven into all of the essays is the intricate dynamic between
immigrant and native-born, between different immigrant waves and
the groups, and between workers at different skill levels.
Work,Recreation, and Culture enriches and expands the established
labor narratives.
Southern cotton planters and Northern textile mill owners
maintained what has been called "an unholy alliance between the
lords of the lash and the lords of the loom." This collection of
essays focuses on the central role of slavery in the early
development of industrialization in the United States as well as on
the interconnections among the histories of African Americans,
women, and labor.
The essays in this volume focus on the role of women in the work
force. They explore how organized sports, social associations of
all kinds and the educational system faced by the children of
worker were profoundly linked to work place and community activism.
They examine why radical labor organizations that could win major
strikes often could not sustain themselves as permanent
institutions. Finally, the essays argue that simultaneous
leadership changes in management and labor in the auto industry
were less the result of internal conflicts than needed structural
adjustments to changing economic and political realities.
Interwoven into all of the essays is the intricate dynamic between
immigrant and native-born, between different immigrant waves and
the groups, and between workers at different skill levels. Work,
Recreation, and Culture enriches and expands the established labor
narratives.
Southern cotton planters and Northern textile mill owners
maintained what has been called "an unholy alliance between the
lords of the lash and the lords of the loom." This collection of
essays focuses on the central role of slavery in the early
development of industrialization in the United States as well as on
the interconnections among the histories of African Americans,
women, and labor.
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