Sewing Women

Sewing Women

Author: Margaret May Chin

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13: 0231133081

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Classical Japanese: A Grammar is a comprehensive, and practical guide to classical Japanese. Extensive notes and historical explanations make this volume useful as both a reference for advanced students and a textbook for beginning students. The volume, which explains how classical Japanese is related to modern Japanese, includes detailed explanations of basic grammar, including helpful, easy-to-use tables of grammatical forms; annotated excerpts from classical premodern texts. Classical Japanese: A Grammar - Exercise Answers and Tables (ISBN: 978-0-231-13530-6) is now available for purchase as a separate volume.


Fighting for the Union Label

Fighting for the Union Label

Author: Kenneth C. Wolensky

Publisher: Penn State University Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 298

ISBN-13:

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The garment industry gained a foothold in Pennsylvania's hard-coal region as mines were closing. "Runaway" factories, especially from Manhattan, set up shop in mining towns where labor was plentiful and unions scarce. By the 1930s, garment factories employed thousands of wives and daughters of unemployed or underemployed coal miners. Organizing these workers proved difficult for the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU).


Triangle

Triangle

Author: David Von Drehle

Publisher: Grove Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 372

ISBN-13: 9780802141514

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Describes the 1911 fire that destroyed the Triangle Shirtwaist factory in New York's Greenwich Village, the deaths of 146 workers in the fire, and the implications of the catastrophe for twentieth-century politics and labor relations.


Fighting for the Union Label: The WomenÕs Garment Industry and the ILGWU in Pennsylvania

Fighting for the Union Label: The WomenÕs Garment Industry and the ILGWU in Pennsylvania

Author:

Publisher: Penn State Press

Published:

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780271045887

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The garment industry gained a foothold in Pennsylvania's hard-coal region as mines were closing. "Runaway" factories, especially from Manhattan, set up shop in mining towns where labor was plentiful and unions scarce. By the 1930s, garment factories employed thousands of wives and daughters of unemployed or underemployed coal miners. Organizing these workers proved difficult for the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU).


Of Common Cloth

Of Common Cloth

Author: Wendy Chapkis

Publisher:

Published: 1987

Total Pages: 76

ISBN-13:

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Conference papers on woman worker textile workers and clothing workers in the global textile industry and clothing industry - discusses wages, working conditions, impact of international subcontracting, racial discrimination, sexual division of labour, trade unionization, militancy, strikes, collective agreements, etc.; includes case studies; stresses the need for protective statutory provisions and solidarity. ILO mentioned. Map, photographs and references. List of participants. Conference held in Amsterdam 1982 Oct.


Ready-to-Wear and Ready-to-Work

Ready-to-Wear and Ready-to-Work

Author: Nancy L. Green

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 1997-01-16

Total Pages: 448

ISBN-13: 0822382741

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Nancy L. Green offers a critical and lively look at New York’s Seventh Avenue and the Parisian Sentier in this first comparative study of the two historical centers of the women’s garment industry. Torn between mass production and "art," this industry is one of the few manufactauring sectors left in the service-centered cities of today. Ready-to-Wear and Ready-to-Work tells the story of urban growth, the politics of labor, and the relationships among the many immigrant groups who have come to work the sewing machines over the last century. Green focuses on issues of fashion and fabrication as they involve both the production and consumption of clothing. Traditionally, much of the urban garment industry has been organized around small workshops and flexible homework, and Green emphasizes the effect this labor organization had on the men and mostly women who have sewn the garments. Whether considering the immigrant Jews, Italians, Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, and Chinese in New York or the Chinese-Cambodians, Turks, Armenians, and Russian, Polish, and Tunisian Jews in Paris, she outlines similarities of social experience in the shops and the unions, while allowing the voices of the workers, in all their diversity to be heard. A provocative examination of gender and ethnicity, historical conflict and consensus, and notions of class and cultural difference, Ready-to-Wear and Ready-to-Work breaks new ground in the methodology of comparative history.


The Women's Garment Workers

The Women's Garment Workers

Author: Lewis Levitzki Lorwin

Publisher:

Published: 1924

Total Pages: 686

ISBN-13:

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This book tells the story of the half-million workers who make the clothes which the American woman wears. The scene is a changing one, shifting from the shops where the clothes are made ot the arena of the public forum and of the national life. The theme is the struggle of an industrial group, once economically weka and neglected, for the recognition of its right and for the humanization of the conditions under whihc it works and lives. It is one of the most poignant and dramatic chapters in the general story of the movement of American Labor for a higher life.