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Fight Like Hell: The Untold History of American Labor


Title Fight Like Hell: The Untold History of American Labor
Writer Kim Kelly
Date 2024-12-29 02:19:35
Type pdf epub mobi doc fb2 audiobook kindle djvu ibooks
Link Listen Read

Desciption

A 2022 New Yorker Best Book of the Year A 2022 Esquire Best Nonfiction Book of the Year A 2022 BuzzFeed Book You’ll Love A 2022 LitHub Favorite Book of the Year “Kelly unearths the stories of the people-farm laborers, domestic workers, factory employees—behind some of the labor movement’s biggest successes.” —The New York Times A revelatory, inclusive history of the American labor movement, from independent journalist and Teen Vogue labor columnist Kim Kelly. Freed Black women organizing for protection in the Reconstruction-era South. Jewish immigrant garment workers braving deadly conditions for a sliver of independence. Asian American fieldworkers rejecting government-sanctioned indentured servitude across the Pacific. Incarcerated workers advocating for basic human rights and fair wages. The queer Black labor leader who helped orchestrate America’s civil rights movement. These are only some of the working-class heroes who propelled American labor’s relentless push for fairness and equal protection under the law. The names and faces of countless silenced, misrepresented, or forgotten leaders have been erased by time as a privileged few decide which stories get cut from the final those of women, people of color, LGBTQIA people, disabled people, sex workers, prisoners, and the poor. In this assiduously researched work of journalism, Teen Vogue columnist and independent labor reporter Kim Kelly excavates that history and shows how the rights the American worker has today—the forty-hour workweek, workplace-safety standards, restrictions on child labor, protection from harassment and discrimination on the job—were earned with literal blood, sweat, and tears. Fight Like Hell comes at a time of economic reckoning in America. From Amazon’s warehouses to Starbucks cafes, Appalachian coal mines to the sex workers of Portland’s Stripper Strike, interest in organized labor is at a fever pitch not seen since the early 1960s. Inspirational, intersectional, and full of crucial lessons from the past, Fight Like Hell shows what is possible when the working class demands the dignity it has always deserved.


Review

My dad was a labor organizer, so I need no persuasion to agree with the power of organized labor and the necessity of worker rights. My review, then, is rather about the stories Kelly chooses to tell, the structure of those stories, and the tone she has settled on.Kelly covers a lot of ground, escorting us through American labor and its many obstacles, neatly grouped into themes. We get a good sense of labor's leading figures, although these glowing profiles too often lost definition under the rainbow gloss of adjectives and superlatives. The people profiled in this book are undoubtedly American heroes, often quite literarily risking their lives to fight for the basic rights of working-class men and women. Personally, I would have rather seen that come through in their own actions and words, and not in the effusive, rally-the-troops style of the prose. In fact, I gravitate more towards legends who have noticeable flaws and warts, their humanity casting their accomplishments all that more extraordinary.

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