The era of post-war prosperity and the Great Depression, 1920-1936 /

"The work of notable Black labor scholars in addition to Du Bois, finds a home in the middle volumes. For example, George E. Haynes, the first African American man to earn a Ph.D. from Columbia University and Director of Negro Economics for the United States Department of Labor, and Helen B. Ir...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Access full-text online via JSTOR
Other authors / contributors: Foner, Philip Sheldon, 1910-1994 (Editor), Lewis, Ronald L., 1940- (Editor), Ervin, Keona K. (Author of introduction, etc.)
Imprint: Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 2019.
Format: Electronic
Language:English
Subjects:
Series:Black worker ; v. 6.
Table of Contents:
  • Part I. Economic condition of the Black worker. The twenties ; The thirties
  • Part II. Black women workers. Negro women in industry
  • Part III. The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and other Black unions in the train service. The porters' struggle for recognition ; The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters at American Federation of Labor conventions ; Selected correspondence between A. Philip Randolph and Milton P. Webster ; Other Black unions in the train service
  • Part IV. The American Federation of Labor and the Black worker. The A.F.L. and the color line ; William Green and Black workers ; Selected A.F. of L. convention resolutions on Black labor
  • Part V. The left. The socialists ; Ben Fletcher and the International Workers of the World ; Otto Hall and the Trade Union Education League ; The American Negro Labor Congress and the National Negro Congress ; The Communist Party, the Trade Union Unity League, and the Black worker
  • Part VI. Black labor at the crossroads. Black workers and the unions ; Three Negro labor committees ; The Committee for Industrial Organization and the Black worker.