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Red November, Black November

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15 July 1989

Red November, Black November is a study of the culture of the I. W. W. movement at the turn of the twentieth century. It analyzes the Wobblies' use of cultural expressions such as songs, poems, and cartoons as a means of educating and unifying workers, and as weapons in the struggle against the repressive social conditions of industrial development. The book emphasizes the important role played by immigrant activists, Wobbly artists, and intellectuals, offering a fascinating portrait of the complexity of pre-World War I labor radicalism.


"This work is full of unexpected ramifications in relation to the existing scholarship. The indications of anarchist influence within the I. W. W. and the illustration of them through iconographic and textual readings are powerful sources of insight. The critique of existing scholarship is penetrating and very convincing. In my considered opinion, there are simply no books similar to this." — Paul Buhle, New York University
Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Historians and the I.W.W.
2. The Myth of Frontier Origins
3. Anarchists at the Founding Convention
4. The I.W.W. and the C.G.T.
5. Art and Politics: Anarcho-Syndicalist Tactics in I.W.W. Art Forms
6. Wobbly Sensibility: Conclusions and Implications
Notes
Bibliography