Includes bibliographical references (p. [301]-356) and index.
Contents
Introduction : Conflicts in a gendered labor history -- Women and the labor movement -- "Where are the organized women workers?" -- Organizing the unorganizable : three Jewish women and their union -- Problems of coalition building : women and trade unions in the 1920s -- Rose Schneiderman and the limits of women's trade unionism -- Gender and class -- Stratifying by sex : notes on the history of working women -- Independence and virtue in the lives of wage-earning women in the United States, 1870-1930 -- A new agenda for American labor history : a gendered analysis and the question of class -- Treating the male as "other" : redefining the parameters of labor history -- Reconfiguring the private in the context of the public -- Labor and social policy -- The just price, the free market, and the value of women -- The debate over equity for women in the workplace : recognizing differences -- Gendered interventions : exploring the historical roots of U.S. social policy -- The paradox of motherhood : night-work restrictions in the United States -- Measures for masculinity : the American labor movement and welfare-state policy during the Great Depression -- New directions -- In pursuit of economic citizenship --Reframing the history of women's wage labor : challenges of a global perspective -- "History is public or nothing" : learning how to keep illusions in our future.