Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 236 pages
- Published by: Paradigm Publishers March 2005
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 1594510830
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1594510830
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Book Dimensions:
9 x 5.8 x 0.7 inches
- Weighs: 11.4 ounces
Product Description
U.S. labor leaders are constantly developing new programs to revive the union movement. What happens when these plans collide with the daily lives of front-line union staff and members? This book looks at the often conflicting interests of key players in the trenches of a national effort to bring back the U.S. labor movement.
Brutally honest, funny, and never dull, this anthropological ethnography shows the daily struggles of union members today to bring about positive change and hold together their urban labor union in an era of globalization, outsourcing, and deindustrialization.
The authors, a union activist and an anthropologist respectively, pair up to offer insider views of labor unions
and of how anthropological fieldwork is done. Explaining, coaching, and warning Paul of hazards, Suzan, the communications director for the local union, provides inside views and details of day-to-day interactions. Paul, the anthropologist, provides outside analytical views that relate Suzan's experiences and his own observations to the wider view anthropology offers through the lenses of ethnography, holism, and comparativism.
The result is a story of one dynamic union local, one anthropological study, and the lit fuse that connects them until the end.
About The Author
E. Paul Durrenberger was a Professor of Anthropology for 25 years at the University of Iowa before moving to Penn State. He has published numerous scholarly articles and books.
Suzan Erem is a freelance writer for unions and author of Labor Pains: Inside America's New Union Movement.