In this classic interpretation of the 1930s rise of industrial unionism, Gary Gerstle challenges the popular historical notion that American workers' embrace of Americanism and other patriotic sentiments in the post-World War I years indicated their fundamental political conservatism. He argues that Americanism was a complex, even contradictory, language of nationalism that lent itself to a wide variety of ideological constructions in the years between World War I and the onset of the Cold War. Using the rich and textured material left behind by New England's most powerful textile union--the Independent Textile Union of Woonsocket, Rhode Island--Gerstle uncovers for the first time a more varied and more radical working-class discourse.
Gary Gerstleis Professor of History and Director of the Center for Historical Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park. He is the author of the forthcoming book
American Crucible: Race and Nation in the Twentieth Century(Princeton). The transformation of ethnically insular workers into passionate American activists is an important story, which Gerstle recounts with unusual subtlety. . . . No one has explored the meaning of Americanism to workers with more intelligence and insight.
---Alan Brinkley,New York Review of Books Scintillating. . . . [Gerstle] uses the method [of social history] with striking originality to tackle the thorny questions of Americanism.
---Alan Dawley,The Nation [A] fascinating new book. . . . One of the great feats of this book is Gerstle's ability to show that intellectual history is not some ethereal, separable history of abstract 'ideas' but is rather a product of class relations born at the workplace.
---Dana Frank,In These Times The most provocative account of working-class politics in the 1930s and 1940s.
---John Bodnar,Journal of American History [A] pathbreaking, impeccably researched history. . . . The sheer scope ols-