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Divided We Stand : American Workers and the Struggle for Black Equality

Part of the Politics and Society in Modern America series
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"Divided We Stand" is a study of how class and race have intersected in American society - above all, in the "making" and remaking of the American working class in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Focusing mainly on longshoremen in the ports of New York, New Orleans, and Los Angeles, and on steelworkers in many of the nation's steel towns, it examines how European immigrants became American and "white" in the crucible of the industrial workplace and the ethnic and working-class neighborhood.

As workers organized on the job, especially during the overlapping CIO and civil rights eras in the middle third of the twentieth century, trade unions became a vital arena in which "old" and "new" immigrants and black migrants forged new alliances and identities and tested the limits not only of class solidarity but of American democracy.

The most volatile force in this regard was the civil rights movement.

As it crested in the 1950s and '60s, "the Movement" confronted unions anew with the question, "Which side are you on?"This book demonstrates the complex ways in which labor organizations answered that question and the complex relationships between union leaders and diverse rank-and-file constituencies in addressing it. "Divided We Stand" includes vivid examples of white working-class "agency" in the construction of racially discriminatory employment structures.

But Nelson is less concerned with racism as such than with the concrete historical circumstances in which racialized class identities emerged and developed.

This leads him to a detailed and often fascinating consideration of white, working-class ethnicity but also to a careful analysis of black workers - their conditions of work, their aspirations and identities, their struggles for equality.

Making its case with passion and clarity, "Divided We Stand" will be a compelling and controversial book.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691095345 / 9780691095349
Paperback / softback
15/01/2002
United States
English
xliv, 388 p. : ill.
24 cm
research & professional /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2001.
Few books fundamentally reshape intellectual and political debates. This one deserves and promises to do so. No scholar since W.E.B. Du Bois has brought to the study of race and labor in the United States such broad sweep, human detail, and conceptual sophistication. None has given us an account which so aptly combines balanced judgments with a tone which is at once tragic and sympathetic. -- David Roediger, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Divided We Stand skillfully examines the complex and often contradictory history of the American labor movement through the shifting contexts of
Few books fundamentally reshape intellectual and political debates. This one deserves and promises to do so. No scholar since W.E.B. Du Bois has brought to the study of race and labor in the United States such broad sweep, human detail, and conceptual sophistication. None has given us an account which so aptly combines balanced judgments with a tone which is at once tragic and sympathetic. -- David Roediger, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Divided We Stand skillfully examines the complex and often contradictory history of the American labor movement through the shifting contexts of 1KBB USA, 3JH c 1800 to c 1900, 3JJ 20th century, HBJK History of the Americas, HBLL Modern history to 20th century: c 1700 to c 1900, HBLW 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000, JFFJ Social discrimination & inequality, JFSL3 Black & Asian studies