The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920-1933

The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920-1933

ISBN-10:
1608460630
ISBN-13:
9781608460632
Pub. Date:
07/01/2010
Publisher:
Haymarket Books
ISBN-10:
1608460630
ISBN-13:
9781608460632
Pub. Date:
07/01/2010
Publisher:
Haymarket Books
The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920-1933

The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920-1933

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Overview

“Pre-eminent among historians of labor history.” —Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.

The textbook history of the 1920s is a story of Prohibition, flappers, and unbounded prosperity. For millions of industrial workers, however, the “roaring twenties” looked very different. Working-class communities were already in crisis in the years before the stock market crash of 1929. Strikes in the 1920s and attempts to organize the unemployed and fight evictions in the early 1930s often fell victim to police violence and repression.

Here, Irving Bernstein recaptures the social history of the decade leading up to Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s inauguration, uncovers its widespread inequality, and sheds light on the long-forgotten struggles that form the prelude to the great labor victories of the 1930s.

"In other words, viewed from afar, most of the people who were suffering the hardships of the Depression were depressed and even ashamed, ready to blame themselves for their plight. But the train of developments that connects changes in social conditions to a changed consciousness is not simple. People, including ordinary people, harbor somewhere in their memories the building blocks of different and contradictory interpretations of what it is that is happening to them, of who should be blamed, and what can be done about it. Even the hangdog and ashamed unemployed worker who swings his lunch box and strides down the street so the neighbors will think he is going to a job can also have other ideas that only have to be evoked, and when they are make it possible for him on another day to rally with others and rise up in anger at his condition.
—From the new introduction by Frances Fox Piven

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781608460632
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Publication date: 07/01/2010
Edition description: Reissue
Pages: 592
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Frances Fox Piven is faculty at the Graduate Center of CUNY. She is the author of several books on the social history of the Great Depression, including Regulating the Poor and Poor People's Movements, co-authored with Richard Cloward. More recently, she has written The War at Home, Challenging Authority: How Ordinary People Change America, and Keeping the Black Vote Down.
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