FROM THE FOLKS WHO BROUGHT YOU THE WEEKEND: A Short Illustrated History of Labor in the United States
Priscilla Murolo, , illus. by Joe Sacco. . New Press, $27 (364pp) ISBN 978-1-56584-444-5
Management's perpetual dream of cheap labor explains the invention of slavery, though few may couch it in those terms. Drawing such connections with impressive evenhandedness and investigative and analytic acuity, this readable popular history covers U.S. labor from precolonial times to the late 1960s, with two short chapters on the last few decades. Brandishing little-known facts, the authors reshape common views of social history. Remarkably, for instance, hundreds of black indentured servants came to the colonies from Africain the 1600s, and throughout the century, as the "peculiar institution" was legalized, these free men and women were forced into slavery. Less astonishing but still significant, the Wobblies pushed as much for free speech as union organizing, and their newspapers were illustrated by famous avant-garde artists. Sometimes the authors simply highlight an obvious fact that has languished in obscurity—for instance, that the American Revolution was sparked by the discontent of working people, not the wealthy or landowning, or that many defenders of slavery believed that all labor should be enslaved. Murolo (who teaches American history at Sarah Lawrence College) and Chitty (a librarian at Queens College) gracefully handle a broad range of subject matter—Chinese railroad labor is considered alongside housework and steel-mill work—making it easier to understand the complex historical relationships between work, gender, ethnicity, race, immigration and sex.
Reviewed on: 07/16/2001
Genre: Nonfiction
Compact Disc - 979-8-212-12969-5
MP3 CD - 979-8-212-12970-1
Paperback - 416 pages - 978-1-62097-448-3
Paperback - 384 pages - 978-1-56584-776-7