Biblioteca / 1990-1999
Robert Asher – Charles Stephenson, ed. Labor Divided. Race and Ethnicity in United States Labor Struggles, 1835-1960.
State University of New York Press, 1990.
CONTENTS
I – Introduction
Chapter 1
American Capitalism, Labor Organization, and the Racial/Ethnic Factor: An Exploration / Robert Asher and Charles Stephenson
II – Non-white Workers in the United States
Chapter 2
Ethnicity and Class in Hawaii: The Plantation Labor Experience, 1835-1920 / Ronald Takari
Chapter 3
Chinese American Agricultural Workers and the Anti-Chinese Movement in Los Angeles, 1870-1890 / Raymound Lou
Chapter 4
Ethnic Life and Labor in Chicago’s Pre-World-War-II Filipino Community / Barbara M. Posadas
Chapter 5
Border Proletarians: Mexican-Americans and the International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers, 1939-1946 / Mario T. García
Chapter 6
Puerto Ricans in the Garment Industry of New York City, 1920-1960 / Altagracia Ortiz
Chapter 7
The Red Scare and Black Workers in Alabama: The International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers, 1945-53 / Horace Huntley
III – European-Origin Workers in the United States
Chapter 8
Immigration, Ethnicity and the American Working-Class Community: Fall River, 1850-1900 / John Cumbler
Chapter 9
Scottish-Americans and the Beginnings of the Modern Class Struggle: Immigrant Coal Miners in Northern Illinois, 1865-1889 / John Laslett
Chapter 10
The German Brewery Workers of New York City in the Late Nineteenth Century / Dorothee Schneider
Chapter 11
Catholic Corporatism, French Canadian Workers, and Industrial Unionism in Rhode Island, 1938-1956 / Gary Gerstle
Chapter 12
British and Irish Militants in the Detroit UAW 227 in the 1930s / Steve Babson
Chapter 13
Women’s Work, Family Economy and Labor Militancy: The Case of Chicago’s Packing-House Workers, 1900-1922 / James R. Barrett
Chapter 14
Anthony Capraro and the Lawrence Strike of 1919 / Rudolph Vecoli
Chapter 15
The Transformation of Working-Class Ethnicity: Corporate Control, Americanization, and the Polish Immigrant Middle Class in Bayonne, New Jersey, 1915-1925 / John Bukowczyk