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LIVE Working or Die Fighting: Up From the Ashes

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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-09-10 03:18 AM
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LIVE Working or Die Fighting: Up From the Ashes
IN "LIVE Working or Die Fighting," Paul Mason describes in vivid detail the great battles of the early labor movement from 1819 to 1945...

As social history, this book stands alongside the great works of Howard Zinn or E.P. Thompson. It is an attempt to recapture a history that has been lost, even as the lessons from that history are more relevant than ever. As Mason puts it:

Today, the working class is bigger than it has ever been, is becoming more truly global. But its stories and narratives are lost. Lost, in part, because even in the West, the transmission mechanisms were broken during the defeat that shattered traditional working-class communities in the 1980s and '90s. But lost also because they were never truly told.

Mason's description of the famous Bread and Roses Strike in Lawrence, Mass., is particularly moving.

He describes the challenge of organizing textile workers who were young, without experience in labor organizing, and divided among numerous immigrant groups consciously pitted against one another by the textile owners. And yet, they found a way to overcome the obstacles.

Strike meetings often lasted all night, because each contribution had to be translated into more than 25 languages. The name of the strike was a reference to the idea that the demands might be about basic things like money and bread, but the goal was to defend workers' dignity--their right to have the means and the time to experience beauty.

As a journalist at the time wrote:

It is the first strike I ever saw which sang. I shall not soon forget the curious lift, the strange sudden fire of the mingled nationalities at the strike meetings when they broke into the universal language of song. And not only at meetings did they sing, but in the soup houses and in the streets. I saw one group of women strikers who were peeling potatoes at a relief station suddenly break into the swing of The Internationale.

This isn't just history. Mason sees parallels between the early years of the labor movement and today. He begins each chapter with a short description of the challenges facing contemporary workers: union organizing in Nigeria, workers in the high-tech sweatshops of India, in the oilfields of Iraq, underground organizing in the industrial boomtowns of Southeast China.

The solutions to the challenges of organizing in the 21st century will have to be discovered by workers themselves. But there are precedents.

The working class has been divided, atomized and weak before. There have been times when the challenges seemed insurmountable. And then, usually at the moment when things looked bleakest, someone found a way forward.

Radicals who had been toiling away in obscurity found that they had a mass audience. And the dream of a world based on freedom, justice and equality, which had lay dormant for many years, suddenly seemed like a possibility.

http://socialistworker.org/2010/12/09/up-from-the-ashes




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