Listening to Workers Listening to Workers
Working Class in American History

Listening to Workers

Oral Histories of Metro Detroit Autoworkers in the 1950s

    • 17,99 €
    • 17,99 €

Description de l’éditeur

Historians and readers alike often overlook the everyday experiences of workers. Drawing on years of interviews and archival research, Daniel J. Clark presents the rich, interesting, and sometimes confounding lives of men and women who worked in Detroit-area automotive plants in the 1950s.

In their own words, the interviewees frankly discuss personal matters like divorce and poverty alongside recollections of childhood and first jobs, marriage and working women, church and hobbies, and support systems and workplace dangers. Their frequent struggles with unstable jobs and economic insecurity upend notions of the 1950s as a golden age of prosperity while stories of domestic violence and infidelity open a door to intimate aspects of their lives. Taken together, the narratives offer seldom-seen accounts of autoworkers as complex and multidimensional human beings.

Compelling and surprising, Listening to Workers foregoes the union-focused strain of labor history to provide ground-level snapshots of a blue-collar world.

GENRE
Politique et actualité
SORTIE
2024
20 août
LANGUE
EN
Anglais
LONGUEUR
230
Pages
ÉDITIONS
University of Illinois Press
DÉTAILS DU FOURNISSEUR
Chicago Distribution Center
TAILLE
1,4
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