
Purchasing Power: Consumer Organizing, Gender, and the Seattle Labor Movement, 1919-1929
by
Dana Frank
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780521467148
Publication Date: 01/28/1994
Edition Description: New Edition
This book analyzes consumer organizing tactics and the decline of the Seattle labor movement in the 1920s, as a case study of the U.S. labor movement in the 1920s. The book examines the transformation of the movement after the famous Seattle General Strike of 1919 by showing that workers organized not only at the point of production, but through politicized consumption as well, employing boycotts, cooperatives, labor-owned businesses, and union label promotion. It pays special attention to the gender dynamics of labor's consumer campaigns, as trade union men sought to persuade their wives to "shop union," and to the racial dynamics of campaigns organized by white workers against Seattle's Japanese-American businesses.
Choose options
New Releases
The Martians: The True Story of an Alien Craze that Captured Turn-of-the-Century America
David Baron
Hardcover
Sale price$29.99
Born in Flames: The Business of Arson and the Remaking of the American City
Bench Ansfield
Hardcover
Sale price$31.99
Are You Mad at Me?: How to Stop Focusing on What Others Think and Start Living for You
Meg Josephson
Hardcover
Sale price$30.00