LABOR HISTORY

Approaching the socialist factory and its workforce: considerations from fieldwork in (former) Yugoslavia
Archer R and Musić G
The socialist factory, as the 'incubator' of the new socialist (wo)man, is a productive entry point for the study of socialist modernization and its contradictions. By outlining some theoretical and methodological insights gathered through field-research in factories in former Yugoslavia, we seek to connect the state of labour history in the Balkans to recent breakthroughs made by labour historians of other socialist countries. The first part of this article sketches some of the specificities of the Yugoslav self-managed factory and its heterogeneous workforce. It presents the ambiguous relationship between workers and the factory and demonstrates the variety of life trajectories for workers in Yugoslav state-socialism (from model communists to alienated workers). The second part engages with the available sources for conducting research inside and outside the factory advocating an approach which combines factory and local archives, print media and oral history.
Cultural aspects of the Industrial Revolution: Lynn, Massachusetts, shoemakers and industrial morality
Faler P
Organizing trade unions to combat disease: the Workers' Health Bureau, 1921-1928
Nugent A
A social contract for the coal fields: the rise and fall of United Mine Workers of America Welfare and Retirement Fund. [Review of: Mulcahy, R.P. A social contract for the coal fields: the rise and fall of United Mine Workers of America Welfare and Retirement Fund. Knoxville: U. of Tennessee Pr., 2000]
David JP
"Take health from the list of luxuries": labor and the right to health care, 1915-1949
Derickson A
Toxicity in the details: the history of the women's office worker movement and occupational health in the late-capitalist office
Murphy M
"I am a man!" Race, masculinity, and the 1968 Memphis sanitation strike
Estes S