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The article reviews and comments on "Picking Up the Linen Threads: A Study in Industrial Folklore," by Betty Messenger, "Working Americans: Contemporary Approaches to Occupational Folklife" (special issue of Western Folklore, 37 (1978), reprinted as Smithsonian Folklife Studies Number 3), edited by Robert H. Byington, and "Land of the Millrats," by Richard M. Dorson.
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The article reviews and comments on "Centre and Periphery: Spatial Variation in Politics," edited by Jean Gottmann, "Under-Developed Europe: Studies in Core-Periphery Relations," by Dudley Seers, Bernard Schaffer, and Marja-Liisa Kiljunen, "Transnational Capitalism and National Development: New Perspectives on Dependence," edited by Jose J. Villamil, "The World-System of Capitalism: Past and Present," (volume 2 of the Political Economy of the World-System Annuals), edited by Walter L. Goldfrank, "Processes of the World-System," (volume 3 of the Political Economy of the World-System Annuals), edited by Terence K. Hopkins and Immanuel Wallerstein, and "The New International Division of Labour," by Folker Frobel, Jurgen Heinrichs, and Otto Kreye.
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This article reviews the book, "Timber Colony. A Historical Geography of Early Nineteenth Century New Brunswick," by Graeme Wynn.
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This article reviews the book, "Canadian Bolsheviks: The Early Years of the Communist Party of Canada," by Ian Angus.
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This article reviews three books: "People's History and Socialist Theory," edited by Raphael Samuel, "East End Underworld: Chapters in the Life of Arthur Harding," edited by Raphael Samuel, and "Rothschild Buildings: Life in an East End Tenement Block, 1887-1920," by Jerry White.
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Working Class Experience is a sweeping and sympathetic study of the development of the Canadian working class since 1800. Beginning with a substantial and provocative introduction that discusses the historiography of the Canadian working class, the book goes on to establish a general framework for analysis of what ultimately is a social history of Canada. Dividing the years into seven periods in the evolution of class struggle, it beings each chapter with an assessment of that period's prevailing economic and social context, followed by an examination of the many factors affecting the working class during that period. Written in a colourful and sometimes irreverent style, Working Class Experience focuses on the processes by which working people moved, and were moved, off the land and into the factories and other workplaces during the Industrial and post-Industrial Revolutions in Canada. Drawing on much recent work on contemporary capitalism, Working Class Experience offers a significant explanation of the malaise in current labour and management relations and speculates on its significance for progressive change in Canadian Life. --Description at Goodreads
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This article reviews the books, "Les relations du travail au Québec," by Emile Bouvier, S.J.
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This article reviews the book, "Managers and Management in West Germany," by Peter Lawrence.
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The author presents the results of a survey on the attitude of trade unions towards technological change.
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This article reviews the book, "La sélection des cadres : principes et problèmes contemporains," by Shimon Dolan & Denis Roy.
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Why are women still second class citizens at work? Recent years have seen demands by the women's movement for equality in the workplace, and "affirmative action" programs have been set up to achieve this goal. Yet little has really changed. Women still earn less than men, are underrepresented in unions, have less protection in pension plans, and are usually stuck in jobs with little chance of advancement. To understand women's inequality at work, Paul and Erin Phillips trace women's involvement in the paid labour market, and in labour unions, throughout Canadian history. They document the disadvantages that women face today and examine the explanations for the existence of these problems. --Publisher's description
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This article reviews the book, "More Than A Labour of Love: Three Generations of Women's Work in the Home," by Meg Luxton.
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This article reviews two books: "The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community, 1930-1960," by Larry Ceplair and Steven Englund, "Film on the Left: American Documentary Film from 1931 to 1942," by William Alexander.
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Disputes the statistics regarding the proportion of the Ontario working population that the Knights of Labor represented, as given in the article, "The Bonds of Unity," by Gregory Kealey and Bryan Palmer.
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The article reviews and comments on "Technology and Toil," by Maxine Berg, "Microelectronics: Capitalist Technology and the Working Class," by CSE Microelectronics Group, "Science, Technology and the Labour Process," edited by Les Levidow and "Living Thinkwork: Where Do Labour Processes Come From?," by Bob Young.
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Cet article présente le fonctionnement des rapports d'autorité entre des cadres subalternes et leurs supérieurs dans la section psychiatrique d'un hôpital montréalais.
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Analyzes changes in French Canadian immigration to the New England cotton industry from 1900-29. Documents the slow-down in immigration flow after 1900, the low presence of newly arrived immigrants, and a sharp decline in the proportion of second-generation as compared to first-generation immigrants who were working in the textile mills. Concludes that the French Canadian immigrants were a much more stable workforce component than previously assumed, and that the industry appears not to have been as attractive to immigrants as it had been during the 1879-90 period.
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This article reviews the book, "Maisonneuve -- Comment des promoteurs fabriquent une ville," by Paul-André Linteau.
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This article reviews the book, "Confessions of an Immigrant's Daughter," by Laura Goodman Salverson.
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This article reviews the book, "Ideologies in Quebec: The Historical Development," by Denis Monière.
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