Ebook: Household workers unite: the untold story of African American women who built a movement
Author: Nadasen Premilla
- Tags: African American household employees, African American household employees--History--20th century, African American labor leaders, African American labor leaders--History--20th century, Arbeiterbewegung, Haushaltshilfe, History, History--20th century, Household employees--Labor unions, Household employees--Labor unions--History--20th century, Political science--Labor and Industrial Relations, Schwarze, Social sciences--Ethnic Studies--African American Studies, Women household employees, Women household employ
- Year: 2015
- Publisher: Beacon Press
- City: Boston;Mass;United States;USA
- Language: English
- epub
"Conversations" about domestic labor -- Women, civil rights, and grassroots mobilization -- A new day for domestic workers -- Intimacy, labor, and professionalization -- Space, place, and new models of labor organizing -- Social rights, feminist solidarity, and FLSA -- Women, work, and immigration;Premilla Nadasen recounts in this powerful book a little-known history of organizing among African American household workers. She uses the stories of a handful of women to illuminate the broader politics of labor, organizing, race, and gender in late 20th-century America. At the crossroads of the emerging civil rights movement, a deindustrializing economy, a burgeoning women's movement, and increasing immigration, household worker activists, who were excluded from both labor rights and mainstream labor organizing, developed distinctive strategies for political mobilization and social change. We learn about their complicated relationship with their employers, who were a source of much of their anguish, but, also, potentially important allies. And equally important they articulated a profound challenge to unequal state policy. Household Workers Unite offers a window into this occupation from a perspective that is rarely seen. At a moment when the labor movement is in decline; as capital increasingly treats workers as interchangeable or dispensible; as the number of manufacturing jobs continues to dwindle and the number of service sector jobs expands; as workers in industrialized countries find themselves in an precarious situation and struggle hard to make ends meet without state support or protection--the lessons of domestic worker organizing recounted here might prove to be more important than just a correction of the historical record. The women in this book, as Nadasen demonstrates, were innovative labor organizers. As a history of poor women workers, it shatters countless myths and assumptions about the labor movement and proposes a very different vision."--Publisher information
Download the book Household workers unite: the untold story of African American women who built a movement for free or read online
Continue reading on any device:
Last viewed books
Related books
{related-news}
Comments (0)