Contributions

  • Asher, Robert. - Contributor
  • Edsforth, Ronald, 1948- - Contributor
  • Merlino, Stephen. - Contributor

Publication

1995 - State University of New York Press, Albany, New York (State)

Language

English

Word Count

76,750 words, Guess

Page Count

307 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • LibraryThing1264054
  • Goodreads2234643

Classifications

  • DDC331.7/6292/0973
  • LCCHD8039.A82 U6253 1995

Description

Autowork focuses on the character of automobile work in the modern factory and the relationships between autoworkers, their union, and management from 1913 to the present. Two-thirds of the essays are devoted to the post-World War II period, which historians have not examined as extensively as the early years of the automobile industry. In these original essays, the experiences of assembly-line workers come alive as never before. Using transcripts of governmental hearings, minutes of negotiations, records of arbitration proceedings, and articles in union newspapers, the authors present autoworkers' and union officials' descriptions of working conditions and the effect these conditions had on workers' health and home life. The essays analyze the dynamics of collective bargaining on important shop-floor issues such as safety, work pace, overtime, job assignments, and managerial discipline. Autowork demonstrates that many historians have underestimated the militancy and effectiveness of the United Automobile Workers of America.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • SUNY series in American labor history

Other Editions

  • AutoworkState University of New York Press1995-01-01

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