Sweatshop: The History of an American Idea

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Rutgers University Press, 2004 - History - 202 pages

Arguing that the sweatshop is as American as apple pie, Laura Hapke surveys over a century and a half of the language, verbal and pictorial, in which the sweatshop has been imagined and its stories told. Not seeking a formal definition of the sort that policymakers are concerned with, nor intending to provide a strict historical chronology, this unique book shows, rather, how the "real" sweatshop has become intertwined with the "invented" sweatshop of our national imagination, and how this mixture of rhetoric and myth has endowed American sweatshops with rich and complex cultural meaning.

Hapke uncovers a wide variety of tales and images that writers, artists, social scientists, reformers, and workers themselves have told about "the shop." Adding an important perspective to historical and economic approaches, Sweatshop draws on sources from antebellum journalism, Progressive era surveys, modern movies, and anti-sweatshop websites. Illustrated chapters detail how the shop has been a facilitator of assimilation, a promoter of upward mobility, the epitome of exploitation, a site of ethnic memory, a venue for political protest, and an expression of twentieth-century managerial narratives.

An important contribution to the real and imagined history of garment industry exploitation, this book provides a valuable new context for understanding contemporary sweatshops that now represent the worst expression of an unregulated global economy.

 

Contents

Narrating the Shop
1
A Shop Is Not a Home Dirt Ethnicity and the Sweatshop
17
Surviving Sites Sweatshops in the Progressive Era and Beyond
40
Newsreel of Memory The WPA Sweatshop in the Great Depression
69
The Sweatshop Returns Postindustrial Art
88
Spinning the New Shop El Monte and the Smithsonian Furor
111
Nikes Sweatshop Quandary and the Industrial Sublime
129
Watching Out for the Shop
144
Notes
157
Selected Bibliography
181
Index
191
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

LAURA HAPKE has taught working-class studies and labor literature at Pace University, Queens College, and Hunter College. Recipient of two Choice Outstanding Academic Book awards, her most recent book is Labor's Text: The Worker in American Fiction.

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