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Fragile Alliances: Labor and Politics in Evansville, Indiana, 1919-1955

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Fragile Alliances: Labor and Politics in Evansville, Indiana, 1919-1955

Contributors:

By (Author) Samuel W. White

ISBN:

9780313321573

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

1st August 2005

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Labour / income economics
Trade unions

Dewey:

331.80977233

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

222

Description

How did the alliance between labor and the Democratic Party develop after the First World War What role does Evansville play in an examination of this alliance What was the impact of the alliance on U.S politics and society These are some of the questions that Samuel W. White tackles in his book Fragile Alliances: Labor and Politics in Evansville, Indiana, 1919-1955. Focusing on Evansville, Indiana, as a case study, White challenges traditional assumptions in the field, such as the following: labor has one political voice; labor is monolithic in electoral politics; the New Deal successfully reordered American society and politics. White examines the roles played by political repression, opposition by employers, and anticommunist forces within the community as well as the labor movement in undermining the labor-Democratic Party alliance in Evansville. He contends that by the 1950s, the impact of these forces blunted the potential of the labor movement and the Democratic Party to transform the political system by giving workers and their allies a permanent political space in electoral politics. How did the alliance between labor and the Democratic Party develop after the First World War What role does Evansville play in an examination of this alliance What was the impact of the alliance on U.S politics and society These are some of the questions that White tackles in his book Fragile Alliances: Labor and Politics in Evansville, Indiana, 1919-1955. Focusing on Evansville, Indiana, as a case study, White challenges traditional assumptions in the field, such as the following: labor has one political voice; labor is monolithic in electoral politics; the New Deal successfully reordered American society and politics. White examines the roles played by political repression, opposition by employers, and anticommunist forces within the community as well as the labor movement in undermining the labor-Democratic Party alliance in Evansville. He contends that by the 1950s, the impact of these forces blunted the potential of the labor movement and the Democratic Party to transform the political system by giving workers and their allies a permanent political space in electoral politics. Much of the published literature on labor and politics in the U.S. is focused on national events and organizations that make labor appear as a monolith in electoral politics. White diverges from the national focus of the majority of this literature, instead looking at labor and politics at the local level. While much of the published literature argues that the alliance between labor and the Democratic Party in the 1930s was a formidable force that reordered American society and politics, White shows that in Evansville, the alliance was anything but that. Racked by political repression, opposition by employers, and anticommunist forces within the community and the labor movement itself, the alliance was remarkably fragile and incapable of sustaining the momentum it had established in the 1930s.

Reviews

"Fragile Alliances provides a clear and detailed analysis of voting patterns in Evansville, and White's ward-by-ward scruntiny yields important data. Convenient tables illustrate individual elections, with complete narrative description of how various classes, ethnicities, and races voted and why."-Labour/Le Travail
Fragile Alliances provides a clear and detailed analysis of voting patterns in Evansville, and White's ward-by-ward scruntiny yields important data. Convenient tables illustrate individual elections, with complete narrative description of how various classes, ethnicities, and races voted and why.-Labour/Le Travail

Author Bio

Samuel W. White is Assistant Professor of Labor Education at the University of Missouri-Columbia. His teaching and research interests include twentieth-century labor history, work organization, and grievance administration. He resides in Columbia with his wife, Sukanya, and children, Jacob and Brishti.

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