|
Nelson Lichtenstein, who teaches
in the Department of History at the University of California, Santa
Barbara will discuss his just-released book, State of the Union:
A Century of American Labor (Princeton University Press, 2002) at
4 p.m. on Wednesday, May 1 in the McCune Conference Room, 6020 Humanities
and Social Sciences Building. Courtesy of the UCSB Bookstore, State
of the Union will be available for purchase and signing at this
event.
Endorsements
"Scholars have come to look to Nelson Lichtenstein
for state-of-the-art work on American labor history. Now he has synthesized
his immense learning into a powerful narrative of the ups and downs
of unions since the New Deal. Elegiac, sympathetic, and keenly realistic,
State of the Union focuses, above all, on the role of ideas and ideology
in shaping contentious outcomes. The writing is engaged, analytically
suggestive, and thoughtfully revisionist. Not just students of trade
unions, but historians of the moments and episodes Lichtenstein chronicles,
will be wrestling with this fascinating book for a long time to come."
- - Ira Katznelson, Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History,
Columbia University
"This is a brilliant work of historical synthesis
and interpretation. No other historian has produced a narrative that
cogently surveys intellectual developments, economic change, political
and legal conflict, and the complexities of labor's internal struggles
and weaves them into a compelling narrative that makes sense of the
rise and fall of the working-class movement." - Michael Kazin,
Professor of History, Georgetown University
Book Description
In a fresh and timely reinterpretation, Nelson Lichtenstein examines
how trade unionism has waxed and waned in the nation's political and
moral imagination, among both devoted partisans and intransigent foes.
From the steel foundry to the burger-grill, from Woodrow Wilson to John
Sweeney, from Homestead to Pittston, Lichtenstein weaves together a
compelling matrix of ideas, stories, strikes, laws, and people in a
streamlined narrative of work and labor in the twentieth century.
The "labor question" became a burning issue during the Progressive
Era because its solution seemed essential to the survival of American
democracy itself. Beginning there, Lichtenstein takes us all the way
to the organizing fever of contemporary Los Angeles, where the labor
movement stands at the center of the effort to transform millions of
new immigrants into alert citizen unionists. He offers an expansive
survey of labor's upsurge during the 1930s, when the New Deal put a
white, male version of industrial democracy at the heart of U.S. political
culture. He debunks the myth of a postwar "management-labor accord"
by showing that there was (at most) a limited, unstable truce.
Lichtenstein argues that the ideas that had once sustained solidarity
and citizenship in the world of work underwent a radical transformation
when the rights-centered social movements of the 1960s and 1970s captured
the nation's moral imagination. The labor movement was therefore tragically
unprepared for the years of Reagan and Clinton: although technological
change and a new era of global economics battered the unions, their
real failure was one of ideas and political will. Throughout, Lichtenstein
argues that labor's most important function, in theory if not always
in practice, has been the vitalization of a democratic ethos, at work
and in the larger society. To the extent that the unions fuse their
purpose with that impulse, they can once again become central to the
fate of the republic. State of the Union is an incisive history that
tells the story of one of America's defining aspirations.
Author
Nelson Lichtenstein is Professor of History at the University of California,
Santa Barbara. He is the author of Walter Reuther: The Most Dangerous
Man in Detroit and other books.
|