“This is a richly textured, collective portrait of people coming of age in the Great Depression and World War II, who worked in one the largest and most important industries in the US and belonged to a union that led the labor movement and set the standard for wages and benefits in many industries.”--Lou Martin, author of <i>Smokestacks in the Hills</i>

Historians and readers alike often overlook the everyday experiences of workers. Drawing on years of interviews and archival research, Daniel J. Clark presents the rich, interesting, and sometimes confounding lives of men and women who worked in Detroit-area automotive plants in the 1950s.

In their own words, the interviewees frankly discuss personal matters like divorce and poverty alongside recollections of childhood and first jobs, marriage and working women, church and hobbies, and support systems and workplace dangers. Their frequent struggles with unstable jobs and economic insecurity upend notions of the 1950s as a golden age of prosperity while stories of domestic violence and infidelity open a door to intimate aspects of their lives. Taken together, the narratives offer seldom-seen accounts of autoworkers as complex and multidimensional human beings.

Compelling and surprising, Listening to Workers foregoes the union-focused strain of labor history to provide ground-level snapshots of a blue-collar world.

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Introduction

Acknowledgments

Alternate Groupings of Narratives

  1. Emerald Neal
  2. Elwin Brown
  3. Paul Ross
  4. Margaret Beaudry
  5. Joe Woods
  6. Les “Lucky” Coleman
  7. Gene Johnson
  8. Dorothy Sackle
  9. L.J. Scott
  10. Thomas Nowak
  11. James McGuire
  12. Edith Arnold
  13. James Franklin
  14. Ernie Liles
  15. Paul Ish
  16. Katie Neumann

Conclusion

Notes

Interview List

Index

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780252045998
Publisert
2025-04-14
Utgiver
University of Illinois Press; University of Illinois Press
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
230

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Daniel J. Clark is a professor of history at Oakland University. He is the author of Disruption in Detroit: Autoworkers and the Elusive Postwar Boom.