Martin Glaberman's examination of American car industry workers wildcat strike wave, despite their own union's no strike pledge, during World War 2.
PDF has been merged and organized.
Taken from http://www.kommunismus.narod.ru
Attachments
Martin Glaberman - Wartime Strikes.pdf
(8.04 MB)
Comments
can't find the link to the
can't find the link to the pdf
Bump coz the PDF is now
Bump coz the PDF is now attached..
cheers!
cheers!
It's great this is now here,
It's great this is now here, this is an excellent book
Note the number of Klan type
Note the number of Klan type wildcats against African-American workers.
The UAW seems to have had the most consistant numbers of wildcats during the war. It certainly one of the more well organized rank-and-file oppositions to the "no strike pledge." The Trotsskyist Schamanites of the Workers Party (Glaberman's party at the time) and the Trotskyist Cannonites of the Socialist Workers Party were in the forefront of the movement. According to SWP writer (and SWP historian of the CIO) Art Preis: "The opposition to the no-strike pledge, led by the Rank and File Caucus, in which the Trotskyists played a big role, piled up 36% of the votes."
Good book, which I read when it first was published. Good to see it on-line for another generation of worker militants/organizers to read.
Yeah, good call putting this
Yeah, good call putting this one up Flaneur.
You ever read How to be Idle? It's how I learned what your username means.
No but that looks good. It
No but that looks good. It looks like Lafargue's Right To Be Lazy which I still have to read.
It's well good, but needs a
It's well good, but needs a good critiquing as well. He loves Lafargue, too.
To be honest, HTBI is
To be honest, HTBI is probably worth having in the libcom library as well.
Was this published by a
Was this published by a wobbly press? Was Glaberman a card-carrying wobbly? I'm saying because there's a wobbly logo on the copyright-page....
Anyone know if Bewick was a wobbly shop?
Pennoid wrote: Was this
Pennoid
No, to Marty being a Wobbly. But Marty was friends with the Perlmans, who helped them put it together at the Black & Red print shop in Detroit, which was a Wobbly shop.
Quote: Was Glaberman a
During the period of time that these strikes took place, Marty was a member of the then Trot. Workers Party.
Ahhh Thanks a lot ya'll!
Ahhh Thanks a lot ya'll!
syndicalist
syndicalist
the WP people were during that period generally in CIO unions, from which they wanted to develop a "Labor Party" ... their weekly paper 1940-1958 is now completely online and contains many interesting articles about strikes and other struggles (e.g. the sharecroppers movement in Southern Missouri) during the war period: http://marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/laboraction-ny/index.htm
Entdinglichung
Entdinglichung
Thanks for the link. Over the years I've seen really crappy copies of individual issues. I look forward to reading the press and about period strikes. And activities of the WP, about their life as an organization.
One thing that's interesting is their journey through Trotskyism ... and some of their members trajectory towards a marxism beyond Trotskyism or into social democracy.
the SWP's The Militant is
the SWP's The Militant is also online for that period: http://marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/themilitant/index.htm ... written in a bit more boring style than LA but also full of information about strikes
Merged and organized the PDF.
Merged and organized the PDF.
Glad to see this is here.