The Southern Key: Class, Race, and Radicalism in the 1930s and 1940s
Autor Michael Goldfielden Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 sep 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197629987
ISBN-10: 0197629989
Pagini: 432
Dimensiuni: 236 x 153 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197629989
Pagini: 432
Dimensiuni: 236 x 153 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This substantial work examines why the US labor movement failed to expand its gains made during the 193s into the postwar period (late 195s-8s)...Goldfield's book ranks among the top tier of available resources...Summing Up: Essential. All readers.
For its exposure of the poverty of liberalism" (chapter 7), Goldfield's book ranks among the top tier of available resources. Essential. All readers.
Understanding and dealing with 'the Southern key' remains central to which way the US will go. Will the US become, or is it already, a stagnant backwater of racial and economic inequality and injustice, contaminated by right-wing politics that teaches people to fight each other and shields corporate and political power from working-class agency? Or will grass-roots movements once again build up a head of steam and challenge racial capitalism at the workplace and the ballot box? ... For all those who care, Goldfield's book is essential.
The Southern Key makes several important contributions...provides powerful evidence that a class-struggle, anti-racist outlook by movement leaders is a major factor in determining success or failure.
Goldfield has done a creditable job of assembling representative sources from the past 60 years...it makes for interesting reading.
The political and scholarly importance of The Southern Key can hardly be overrated. Michael Goldfield's empirically thorough and theoretically reflexive work convincingly argues that the failures of southern labor during the 1930s and 1940s are essential for understanding everything else that has happened since, in the US, and therefore also in the world at large.
The Southern Key contains a significant and compelling explanation of the origins of the current state of the US and the world. Michael Goldfield with great erudition and a mastery of scholarly and archival sources engages the complexities in linking struggles against racial and class oppression in the US South Informed by his own life of activism and commitment, Goldfield guides us through the decades of the 1930s and '40s making clear the relationship of events of those years to the limited successes and larger failures of subsequent decades. It is hard to praise The Southern Key too highly. It should be read by many who have long awaited such a work and the many more who need it.
Culminating a lifetime of thinking and digging into sources by an important scholar of race, class, and power, The Southern Key tells the riveting story of the possibilities and failures of organizing workers in the South in the 1930s and 1940s. Goldfield brilliantly shows how defeats in that time and place closed off possibilities for a successful labor movement everywhere in the US, and for meaningful class and anti-racist politics, for decades to come.
Michael Goldfield overturns decades of historical scholarship and prevailing wisdom-about trade unions, the American Left, race and class, and especially about the South. His sober, carefully researched assessment not only explains labor's decline and its impact on democratic struggles for justice, but considers what could have happened had movement leaders made different choices. The Southern Key holds the organizer's lesson: just as our present was not inevitable, neither is our future.
Ambitious, wide-ranging, and deeply focused historical studies-those like Michael Goldfield's Southern Key-will remain indispensable for addressing such questions in the work to come.
For its exposure of the poverty of liberalism" (chapter 7), Goldfield's book ranks among the top tier of available resources. Essential. All readers.
Understanding and dealing with 'the Southern key' remains central to which way the US will go. Will the US become, or is it already, a stagnant backwater of racial and economic inequality and injustice, contaminated by right-wing politics that teaches people to fight each other and shields corporate and political power from working-class agency? Or will grass-roots movements once again build up a head of steam and challenge racial capitalism at the workplace and the ballot box? ... For all those who care, Goldfield's book is essential.
The Southern Key makes several important contributions...provides powerful evidence that a class-struggle, anti-racist outlook by movement leaders is a major factor in determining success or failure.
Goldfield has done a creditable job of assembling representative sources from the past 60 years...it makes for interesting reading.
The political and scholarly importance of The Southern Key can hardly be overrated. Michael Goldfield's empirically thorough and theoretically reflexive work convincingly argues that the failures of southern labor during the 1930s and 1940s are essential for understanding everything else that has happened since, in the US, and therefore also in the world at large.
The Southern Key contains a significant and compelling explanation of the origins of the current state of the US and the world. Michael Goldfield with great erudition and a mastery of scholarly and archival sources engages the complexities in linking struggles against racial and class oppression in the US South Informed by his own life of activism and commitment, Goldfield guides us through the decades of the 1930s and '40s making clear the relationship of events of those years to the limited successes and larger failures of subsequent decades. It is hard to praise The Southern Key too highly. It should be read by many who have long awaited such a work and the many more who need it.
Culminating a lifetime of thinking and digging into sources by an important scholar of race, class, and power, The Southern Key tells the riveting story of the possibilities and failures of organizing workers in the South in the 1930s and 1940s. Goldfield brilliantly shows how defeats in that time and place closed off possibilities for a successful labor movement everywhere in the US, and for meaningful class and anti-racist politics, for decades to come.
Michael Goldfield overturns decades of historical scholarship and prevailing wisdom-about trade unions, the American Left, race and class, and especially about the South. His sober, carefully researched assessment not only explains labor's decline and its impact on democratic struggles for justice, but considers what could have happened had movement leaders made different choices. The Southern Key holds the organizer's lesson: just as our present was not inevitable, neither is our future.
Ambitious, wide-ranging, and deeply focused historical studies-those like Michael Goldfield's Southern Key-will remain indispensable for addressing such questions in the work to come.
Notă biografică
Michael Goldfield is Professor Emeritus of Political Science and currently Research Fellow at the Fraser Center for Workplace Issues at Wayne State University. A former labor union and civil rights activist, Goldfield's work focuses on the study of labor, class, race, and American politics.