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For All White-Collar Workers
The Possibilities of Radicalism in New York City’s Department Store Unions, 1934–1953
Daniel J. Opler
“Opler has steered the debate over twentieth-century American labor radicalism in a welcome direction.” —American Historical Review
“Daniel Opler examines a breadth of important issues and he does an excellent job of examining gender issues in the Depression Era labor movement. Opler thoroughly understands the dynamics of effective strike organizing.” —Mark Naison, director of the Urban Studies Program, and professor of African American Studies and History, Fordham University
In recent decades the American labor movement has fallen on hard times, in part due to its long reliance on blue-collar workers for its membership despite the growing importance of retail and service jobs. In For All White-Collar Workers: The Possibilities of Radicalism in New York City’s Department Store Unions, 1934–1953, Daniel Opler examines early efforts to unionize workers in department and retail stores. Beginning with the origins of the modern labor movement in the mid-1930s, Opler argues that Communist labor organizers created vibrant and powerful unions in New York City’s department stores, only to see those unions—and the CIO’s powerful retail workers’ union—destroyed during the McCarthy era.
In the process of examining these unions, Opler takes the reader far beyond union meetings and contract negotiations, exploring the ways in which consumption, urban life, and changing understandings of public space affected the unions in these eras. As a result, For All White-Collar Workers becomes an exploration of such diverse subjects as the conflicts over midtown Manhattan, the 1939–1940 New York World’s Fair, the link between consumption and patriotism during World War II, private housing developments in 1940s New York City, and suburbanization, all viewed through the lens of the rise and fall of New York City’s department store unions.
Daniel J. Opler is assistant professor of history at the College of Mount
Saint Vincent, Riverdale, New York.
May 2007 History/US/20th Century 270 pp. 6x9 |
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