The Other Women's Movement
Workplace Justice and Social Rights in Modern America
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
October 1, 2003
This third title by Cobble (Inst. of Management & Labor Relations, Rutgers Univ.), whose first book was a history of waitress unionism (Dishing It Out) and whose second was an edited collection of essays (whose Women and Unions), shows the results of prodigious research in the service of "labor feminism," called by others "working-class feminism." She explains how this powerful and equally good form of feminism was eclipsed by "equal rights feminism," the middle-class feminism that came to dominance in the 1960s. Labor feminists wanted both the equality and the special treatment given by protective legislation, and they did not see incompatibility between the two. Labor feminists value employee representation and collective power rather than the individual's upward mobility, which they might characterize as "thrills for the few." One result of these diverging feminisms was that equally dedicated women voted yes and no to the first Equal Rights Amendment in 1948 and later to the Women's Status Bill. Cobble believes that labor feminism learned from second-wave feminism and that later the new feminism learned from the old. She outlines steps that must be taken for labor feminism to be revitalized. This solid argument for the value of "the other women's movement" is recommended for academic libraries and special labor and women's studies collections.-Janice Dunham, John Jay Coll. Lib., CUNY
Copyright 2003 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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