Description
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- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- • 1 • Starting Out in the Fifties: True Confessions of a Labor Historian
- Part 1: Labor Radicalism, Culture, and Comparative History
- • 2 • The Origins of Western Working-Class Radicalism, 1890–1905
- • 3 • The IWW, the Culture of Poverty, and the Concept of Power
- • 4 • Tom Mann and William D. Haywood: Culture, Personality, and Comparative History
- Part 2: Workers, Politics, and the State
- • 5 • Abortive Reform:The Wilson Administration and Organized Labor, 1913–20
- • 6 • Not So “Turbulent Years”: Another Look at America in the 1930s
- • 7 • American Industrial Workers and Political Parties from Roosevelt to Reagan: A Comparative Perspective
- Part 3: Theory and World Systems
- • 8 • Technological Change and American Worker Movements, 1870–1970
- • 9 • A New Look at the Original Case: To What Extent Was the United States Fordist?
- Theoretical Foundations of Fordism
- The Testing Time of Fordism
- Fordism in Practice
- The New Deal and the Coming of Keynesianism
- Conclusion
- • 10 • : If All the World Were Paterson: Herbert Gutman, the American Working Class, and the Future of Labor History
- Selected Publications
- Index
- The Working Class in American History
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