305.562 WOR Work, Community, and Power : the Experience of Labor in Europe and America, 1900 - 1925 / ed.: J. E. Cronin, C. Sirianni. - Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 1983. - 318 p. - (Class and Culture). - ISBN 0-87722-309-2. - Текст : непосредственный. Index : p. 311 - 318
Cronin, James. Rethinking the Legacy of Labor, 1890 - 1925 / J. E. Cronin Cronin, James. Labor Insurgency and Class Formation : Comparative Perspectives on the Crisis of 1917 - 1920 in Europe / J. E. Cronin Peterson, Larry. The One Big Union in International Perspective : Revolutionary Industrial Unionism, 1900 - 1925 / L. Peterson Montgomery, David. New Tendencies in Union Struggles and Strategies in Europe and the United States, 1916 - 1922 / D. Montgomery Nolan, Mary. Workers and Revolution in Germany, 1918 - 1919 : the Urban Dimension / M. Nolan Cross, Gary. Redefining Workers' Control : Rationalization, Labor Time, and Union Politics in France, 1900 - 1928 / G. Cross Fraser, Steve. The "New Unionism" and the "New Economic Policy" / S. Fraser Dubofsky, Melvyn. Abortive Reform : the Wilson Administration and Organized Labor, 1913 - 1920 / M. Dubofsky Rosenberg, William. The Democratization of Russia's Railroads in 1917 / W. G. Rosenberg Sirianni, Carmen. Workers' Control in Europe : a Comparative Sociological Analysis / C. Sirianni
The first quarter of the twentieth century was perhaps the most dramatic and consequential period for the international working class. Corporate control was consolidated and centralized. The workplace began to be extensively reorganized by Taylorist and later Fordist methods. Revolutions, factory occupations, and new forms of workers' control and industrial democracy followed in the wake of World War I. Revolutionary industrial unionism challenged previous organizations, and new communist parties contended with Social Democracy for the political allegiance of the working classes. In this crucible of struggle and social transformation, many of the most influential political and social theories were forged: not only those of Lenin and Kautsky, but also Gramsci and Lukacs, Korsch and Austro-Maxism, Michel and Weber. The meaning of both democracy and socialism has remained contested ever since. The comparative and case studies in this collection offer a major reinterpretation of this crucial period in working class history in the United States, Europe, and Soviet Russia. They combine recent interests of historians and social scientists in the labor process, social history "from the bottom up", the mobilization of social movements, the world system and international state competition with more traditional concerns about organization, theory and politics