Description

Book Synopsis
Explains why the working class was largely missing from the 1989-90 revolution which led to the fall of socialism in Germany. This book documents workers' day-to-day experience of the labor process, workplace union politics, and class. It shows how three factors led most workers to withdraw from politics.

Trade Review
"Clearly written, crisply argued, and accessible not only to sociologists but also to historians and political scientists." - Choice "Fuller tells her central story elegantly and persuasively... A valuable contribution to the emerging story of the fall of the Berlin Wall." -- Frederick D. Weil, Contemporary Sociology ADVANCE PRAISE "Where Was the Working Class? is a fascinating and highly readable account of the process of unification from the perspective of ordinary workers in the former East Germany. Fuller is unrelenting in her insistence on viewing this historic upheaval from below, arguing persuasively that most workers were spectators rather than active participants in the drama."-Ruth Milkman, author of Gender at Work: The Dynamics of Job Segregation by Sex during World War II "This is what we've been waiting for-a book that looks at the fall of communism from the standpoint of workers and their daily lives."-Michael Burawoy, coauthor of The Radiant Past: Ideology and Reality in Hungary's Road to Capitalism "A fresh and revealing look at one of the most significant events of our time, as seen from the perspective of the 'forgotten class'-those ordinary wage earners in East Germany whose experiences under the former 'worker's state' shaped their varying patterns of participation in the revolutionary movements of 1989...Ethnographically rich and theoretically compelling, Where Was the Working Class? offers important lessons, far and wide, for students of workplace politics and class formation."-Howard Kimeldorf, author of Reds or Rackets? The Making of Radical and Conservative Unions on the Waterfront

Where Was the Working Class

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    £39.95

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    RRP £47.00 – you save £7.05 (15%)

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    A Paperback / softback by Linda Fuller

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      Publisher: University of Illinois Press
      Publication Date: 01/03/1999
      ISBN13: 9780252067518, 978-0252067518
      ISBN10: 0252067517

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Explains why the working class was largely missing from the 1989-90 revolution which led to the fall of socialism in Germany. This book documents workers' day-to-day experience of the labor process, workplace union politics, and class. It shows how three factors led most workers to withdraw from politics.

      Trade Review
      "Clearly written, crisply argued, and accessible not only to sociologists but also to historians and political scientists." - Choice "Fuller tells her central story elegantly and persuasively... A valuable contribution to the emerging story of the fall of the Berlin Wall." -- Frederick D. Weil, Contemporary Sociology ADVANCE PRAISE "Where Was the Working Class? is a fascinating and highly readable account of the process of unification from the perspective of ordinary workers in the former East Germany. Fuller is unrelenting in her insistence on viewing this historic upheaval from below, arguing persuasively that most workers were spectators rather than active participants in the drama."-Ruth Milkman, author of Gender at Work: The Dynamics of Job Segregation by Sex during World War II "This is what we've been waiting for-a book that looks at the fall of communism from the standpoint of workers and their daily lives."-Michael Burawoy, coauthor of The Radiant Past: Ideology and Reality in Hungary's Road to Capitalism "A fresh and revealing look at one of the most significant events of our time, as seen from the perspective of the 'forgotten class'-those ordinary wage earners in East Germany whose experiences under the former 'worker's state' shaped their varying patterns of participation in the revolutionary movements of 1989...Ethnographically rich and theoretically compelling, Where Was the Working Class? offers important lessons, far and wide, for students of workplace politics and class formation."-Howard Kimeldorf, author of Reds or Rackets? The Making of Radical and Conservative Unions on the Waterfront

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