道德正义的问题:黑人洗衣女工和争取正义的斗争

IF 0.3 Q4 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
Eileen Boris
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The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA), the union where the laundry workers found a home, installed a cadre that maintained white male power while suppressing rank-and-file decision-making and sustaining the racialized gender division of labor in the industry. Nonetheless, Carson finds inspiration in the laundry workers’ long fight for “racial justice, economic dignity, and gender equality” against mobbed-up bosses and self-serving union bureaucrats (9).Grounded in recent scholarship, A Matter of Moral Justice combines structural analysis of the industry with deft mini-biographies and astute assessments of industrial feminism, left organizations, and the CIO itself. While home washing and hand laundries never completely faded away, new technologies allowed for power laundry expansion in the 1920s. The association of Black women with the southern washerwoman and dirty work justified employer hiring of recent migrants into this low-wage occupation. Against standard interpretations that stress the undesirability of laundry jobs, Carson argues that “African American women embraced power laundry work as a rare and coveted opportunity to leave domestic service” (21). Still, they faced a Jim Crow organization of production in which customer and employer preference for white men as drivers and white women as markers and office staff highlighted racialized understandings of skill. Inside work further reflected gendered notions of men as best able to handle machines that were thought to require scientific exactitude. As shakers and ironers, Black women did the most manual labor for the least pay under the worst conditions, including constant sexual harassment. Carson concludes that more privileged male workers sought to maintain their economic advantages, joining employers in stymieing “workplace solidarities, while simultaneously providing opportunities for women and people of color to mobilize in independent and oftentimes empowering spaces where they forged race- and gender-based coalitions with allies in the labor movement” (40). Chinese hand laundries retained a niche and remained an unorganized sector throughout the century.Carson's revisionism extends to the Women's Trade Union League (WTUL), which appears more committed to organizing than previously acknowledged. It also stood as the least racist of white-dominated organizations due to the efforts of New York leader Rose Schneiderman, whose own experiences of anti-Semitism and male prejudice generated what today we'd call an intersectional understanding of the “oppression that women of color experienced” (69). However, Carson argues that Schneiderman's gendered lens led her to underestimate the racist opposition of male workers, a roadblock that communist organizers emphasized. Into the Great Depression, the WTUL supported the laundry workers by hiring organizers, influencing New York's new Minimum Fair Wage Advisory Committee, and sending “mink brigade” picketers during the 1934 Brooklyn walkout. Its “political connections” with Mayor Fiorella La Guardia brought the employers to a settlement that was never properly enforced. Despite parallel organizing by communists in Harlem and the Bronx, “employer antiunionism, the workers’ destitution, and the state's unreliability . . . impeded organization” in an environment without extensive solidarity and lacking deep organizational resources (106). After the Wagner Act and the more favorable climate of the Second New Deal, laundry workers were able to transform earlier solidarities into victory under the CIO.Carson prefers the more militant League of Women Shoppers to the WTUL, but she saves her admiration for dedicated women activists: Jewish communists Jessie Taft Smith and Beatrice Shapiro Lumpkin; and Black organizers Charlotte Adelmond, who was a Garveyite nationalist, and Dollie Lowther Robinson. Carson relies on oral interviews with Smith and Lumpkin to recover this history of interracial organizing and to assess various campaigns. She lauds the confrontational actions of the Laundry Workers Industrial Union that Smith and Lumpkin helped to build in 1933, which contributed to racial solidarities, bringing drivers and inside workers together across race and gender. She is partisan but still critical of the communists, especially their neglect of women's issues.Recovering the centrality of Black women is a major contribution. Trinidadian-born “tough lady” Adelmond commanded rank-and-file loyalty (119). Robinson developed a friendship and support network with Adelmond and Maida Springer of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, even as she remained close to the WTUL and especially to Bessie Hillman of the ACWA. Running the Education Department of the Laundry Workers Joint Board (LWJB), Robinson would educate the whole worker to cultivate independence. “With Adelmond taking on the role of public provocateur, Robinson worked behind the scenes to create the space for her friend to continue her advocacy,” Carson observes (148). Neither would survive the consolidation of power in the hands of former driver Louis Simon and other white men in control of the LWJB. Reassigned to a lesser position within the union, Adelmond resigned in 1950, while Robinson would alternate working for unions and government over the next decades.Adelmond was one force affiliating the laundry workers with the anticommunist ACWA, whose interracial social unionism turned out to be less robust when it came to “local autonomy and organic leadership” than when the question was supporting the larger civil rights movement (131). Carson charts post–World War II tensions between “union democracy and union bureaucracy” that won modest gains but continued occupational segregation, worker disengagement, and dwindling membership—even as retail laundries and a reconfigured power laundry sector flourished (212). Despite changed legal and political environments, Carson finds a usable past for today's immigrant laundry workers in this history of “civil disobedience, impromptu walkouts and strikes, community alliances, and social and educational activities to build solidarities” (222). 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By moving the time frame forward, she instead offers a sobering study of New York City's laundry worker unionism that accounts for the subsequent purge of communist organizers and the postwar defeat of the civil rights–and community-based “democratic initiative” led by Black women (127). The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA), the union where the laundry workers found a home, installed a cadre that maintained white male power while suppressing rank-and-file decision-making and sustaining the racialized gender division of labor in the industry. Nonetheless, Carson finds inspiration in the laundry workers’ long fight for “racial justice, economic dignity, and gender equality” against mobbed-up bosses and self-serving union bureaucrats (9).Grounded in recent scholarship, A Matter of Moral Justice combines structural analysis of the industry with deft mini-biographies and astute assessments of industrial feminism, left organizations, and the CIO itself. While home washing and hand laundries never completely faded away, new technologies allowed for power laundry expansion in the 1920s. The association of Black women with the southern washerwoman and dirty work justified employer hiring of recent migrants into this low-wage occupation. Against standard interpretations that stress the undesirability of laundry jobs, Carson argues that “African American women embraced power laundry work as a rare and coveted opportunity to leave domestic service” (21). Still, they faced a Jim Crow organization of production in which customer and employer preference for white men as drivers and white women as markers and office staff highlighted racialized understandings of skill. Inside work further reflected gendered notions of men as best able to handle machines that were thought to require scientific exactitude. As shakers and ironers, Black women did the most manual labor for the least pay under the worst conditions, including constant sexual harassment. Carson concludes that more privileged male workers sought to maintain their economic advantages, joining employers in stymieing “workplace solidarities, while simultaneously providing opportunities for women and people of color to mobilize in independent and oftentimes empowering spaces where they forged race- and gender-based coalitions with allies in the labor movement” (40). Chinese hand laundries retained a niche and remained an unorganized sector throughout the century.Carson's revisionism extends to the Women's Trade Union League (WTUL), which appears more committed to organizing than previously acknowledged. It also stood as the least racist of white-dominated organizations due to the efforts of New York leader Rose Schneiderman, whose own experiences of anti-Semitism and male prejudice generated what today we'd call an intersectional understanding of the “oppression that women of color experienced” (69). However, Carson argues that Schneiderman's gendered lens led her to underestimate the racist opposition of male workers, a roadblock that communist organizers emphasized. Into the Great Depression, the WTUL supported the laundry workers by hiring organizers, influencing New York's new Minimum Fair Wage Advisory Committee, and sending “mink brigade” picketers during the 1934 Brooklyn walkout. Its “political connections” with Mayor Fiorella La Guardia brought the employers to a settlement that was never properly enforced. Despite parallel organizing by communists in Harlem and the Bronx, “employer antiunionism, the workers’ destitution, and the state's unreliability . . . impeded organization” in an environment without extensive solidarity and lacking deep organizational resources (106). After the Wagner Act and the more favorable climate of the Second New Deal, laundry workers were able to transform earlier solidarities into victory under the CIO.Carson prefers the more militant League of Women Shoppers to the WTUL, but she saves her admiration for dedicated women activists: Jewish communists Jessie Taft Smith and Beatrice Shapiro Lumpkin; and Black organizers Charlotte Adelmond, who was a Garveyite nationalist, and Dollie Lowther Robinson. Carson relies on oral interviews with Smith and Lumpkin to recover this history of interracial organizing and to assess various campaigns. She lauds the confrontational actions of the Laundry Workers Industrial Union that Smith and Lumpkin helped to build in 1933, which contributed to racial solidarities, bringing drivers and inside workers together across race and gender. She is partisan but still critical of the communists, especially their neglect of women's issues.Recovering the centrality of Black women is a major contribution. Trinidadian-born “tough lady” Adelmond commanded rank-and-file loyalty (119). Robinson developed a friendship and support network with Adelmond and Maida Springer of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, even as she remained close to the WTUL and especially to Bessie Hillman of the ACWA. Running the Education Department of the Laundry Workers Joint Board (LWJB), Robinson would educate the whole worker to cultivate independence. “With Adelmond taking on the role of public provocateur, Robinson worked behind the scenes to create the space for her friend to continue her advocacy,” Carson observes (148). Neither would survive the consolidation of power in the hands of former driver Louis Simon and other white men in control of the LWJB. Reassigned to a lesser position within the union, Adelmond resigned in 1950, while Robinson would alternate working for unions and government over the next decades.Adelmond was one force affiliating the laundry workers with the anticommunist ACWA, whose interracial social unionism turned out to be less robust when it came to “local autonomy and organic leadership” than when the question was supporting the larger civil rights movement (131). Carson charts post–World War II tensions between “union democracy and union bureaucracy” that won modest gains but continued occupational segregation, worker disengagement, and dwindling membership—even as retail laundries and a reconfigured power laundry sector flourished (212). Despite changed legal and political environments, Carson finds a usable past for today's immigrant laundry workers in this history of “civil disobedience, impromptu walkouts and strikes, community alliances, and social and educational activities to build solidarities” (222). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在书写历史时,起点和终点很重要。“我原本打算以一种胜利的口吻来结束这本书:1937年工会运动的成功,以及随后达成的全行业协议,这些协议确保了更高的工资、更短的工作时间、带薪假期和病假、调解工作场所不满的仲裁机制和关闭的工厂。”珍妮·卡森承认(6)。通过将时间框架向前推进,她对纽约市的洗衣工人工会主义进行了发人深思的研究,这解释了随后对共产主义组织者的清洗和战后民权运动的失败,以及黑人妇女领导的以社区为基础的“民主倡议”(127)。美国服装工人联合会(ACWA)是洗衣工人找到家的工会,它设立了一个骨干组织,维持白人男性的权力,同时压制普通员工的决策,维持行业中种族化的性别分工。尽管如此,卡森还是从洗衣工人为“种族公正、经济尊严和性别平等”而进行的长期斗争中找到了灵感,这些斗争反对群体性的老板和自私自利的工会官僚(9)。基于最近的学术研究,《道德正义的问题》结合了对洗衣行业的结构分析,以及对工业女权主义、左翼组织和CIO本身的敏锐评估。虽然家庭洗衣和手洗从未完全消失,但新技术使电动洗衣在20世纪20年代得到了发展。黑人妇女与南方洗衣妇和肮脏工作的联系为雇主雇用新移民从事这一低工资职业提供了理由。与强调洗衣工作不受欢迎的标准解释相反,卡森认为“非裔美国妇女将洗衣工作视为离开家政服务的难得和令人垂涎的机会”(21)。尽管如此,他们仍然面临着一个种族歧视的生产组织,在这个组织中,客户和雇主更倾向于让白人男性担任司机,让白人女性担任标记,而办公室员工则突出了对技能的种族化理解。内部工作进一步反映了性别观念,即男性最能操作被认为需要科学准确性的机器。作为摇衣机和熨衣机,黑人女性在最恶劣的条件下,以最少的报酬从事最多的体力劳动,包括不断的性骚扰。卡森的结论是,更多享有特权的男性工人寻求保持他们的经济优势,与雇主一起阻碍“工作场所的团结,同时为妇女和有色人种提供机会,让他们在独立的、往往是赋权的空间中动员起来,与劳工运动中的盟友结成基于种族和性别的联盟”(40)。中国的手工洗衣店在整个世纪都保持着一个小众市场,仍然是一个无组织的行业。卡森的修正主义延伸到了妇女工会联盟(WTUL),该联盟似乎比之前承认的更致力于组织。由于纽约领导人罗斯·施奈德曼(Rose Schneiderman)的努力,它也是白人主导的组织中最不种族主义的组织,她自己的反犹太主义和男性偏见的经历产生了我们今天所说的对“有色人种女性所经历的压迫”的交叉理解(69)。然而,卡森认为,施奈德曼的性别视角导致她低估了男性工人的种族主义反对,这是共产主义组织者强调的一个障碍。在大萧条时期,WTUL通过雇佣组织者来支持洗衣工人,影响纽约新成立的最低公平工资咨询委员会,并在1934年布鲁克林罢工期间派遣“貂皮旅”纠察队。它与市长菲奥雷拉·拉·瓜迪亚(Fiorella La Guardia)的“政治关系”使雇主达成了一项从未得到适当执行的和解。尽管哈莱姆区和布朗克斯的共产主义者也组织了类似的活动,“雇主反工会主义、工人的贫困和国家的不可靠……”在没有广泛团结和缺乏深层组织资源的环境中阻碍组织(106)。在瓦格纳法案和第二次新政的有利气候之后,洗衣工人能够将早期的团结转化为CIO领导下的胜利。卡森更喜欢更激进的女性购物者联盟,而不是WTUL,但她对专注的女性活动家表示钦佩:犹太共产主义者杰西·塔夫特·史密斯和比阿特丽斯·夏皮罗·兰普金;以及黑人组织者夏洛特·阿德尔蒙德,她是一名加维派民族主义者,还有多利·洛瑟·罗宾逊。卡森依靠对史密斯和兰普金的口头采访来恢复这段跨种族组织的历史,并评估各种运动。她称赞史密斯和兰普金在1933年帮助建立的洗衣工人工业联盟(Laundry Workers Industrial Union)的对抗行动,该联盟促进了种族团结,使司机和内部工人不分种族和性别团结在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Matter of Moral Justice: Black Women Laundry Workers and the Fight for Justice
In writing history, beginnings and endings matter. “I had originally intended to conclude this book on a triumphant note with the success of the union campaign in 1937 and with subsequent achievement of industry-wide agreements that secured higher wages, shorter hours, paid vacation and sick days, arbitration machinery to mediate workplace grievances and a closed shop,” confessed Jenny Carson (6). By moving the time frame forward, she instead offers a sobering study of New York City's laundry worker unionism that accounts for the subsequent purge of communist organizers and the postwar defeat of the civil rights–and community-based “democratic initiative” led by Black women (127). The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA), the union where the laundry workers found a home, installed a cadre that maintained white male power while suppressing rank-and-file decision-making and sustaining the racialized gender division of labor in the industry. Nonetheless, Carson finds inspiration in the laundry workers’ long fight for “racial justice, economic dignity, and gender equality” against mobbed-up bosses and self-serving union bureaucrats (9).Grounded in recent scholarship, A Matter of Moral Justice combines structural analysis of the industry with deft mini-biographies and astute assessments of industrial feminism, left organizations, and the CIO itself. While home washing and hand laundries never completely faded away, new technologies allowed for power laundry expansion in the 1920s. The association of Black women with the southern washerwoman and dirty work justified employer hiring of recent migrants into this low-wage occupation. Against standard interpretations that stress the undesirability of laundry jobs, Carson argues that “African American women embraced power laundry work as a rare and coveted opportunity to leave domestic service” (21). Still, they faced a Jim Crow organization of production in which customer and employer preference for white men as drivers and white women as markers and office staff highlighted racialized understandings of skill. Inside work further reflected gendered notions of men as best able to handle machines that were thought to require scientific exactitude. As shakers and ironers, Black women did the most manual labor for the least pay under the worst conditions, including constant sexual harassment. Carson concludes that more privileged male workers sought to maintain their economic advantages, joining employers in stymieing “workplace solidarities, while simultaneously providing opportunities for women and people of color to mobilize in independent and oftentimes empowering spaces where they forged race- and gender-based coalitions with allies in the labor movement” (40). Chinese hand laundries retained a niche and remained an unorganized sector throughout the century.Carson's revisionism extends to the Women's Trade Union League (WTUL), which appears more committed to organizing than previously acknowledged. It also stood as the least racist of white-dominated organizations due to the efforts of New York leader Rose Schneiderman, whose own experiences of anti-Semitism and male prejudice generated what today we'd call an intersectional understanding of the “oppression that women of color experienced” (69). However, Carson argues that Schneiderman's gendered lens led her to underestimate the racist opposition of male workers, a roadblock that communist organizers emphasized. Into the Great Depression, the WTUL supported the laundry workers by hiring organizers, influencing New York's new Minimum Fair Wage Advisory Committee, and sending “mink brigade” picketers during the 1934 Brooklyn walkout. Its “political connections” with Mayor Fiorella La Guardia brought the employers to a settlement that was never properly enforced. Despite parallel organizing by communists in Harlem and the Bronx, “employer antiunionism, the workers’ destitution, and the state's unreliability . . . impeded organization” in an environment without extensive solidarity and lacking deep organizational resources (106). After the Wagner Act and the more favorable climate of the Second New Deal, laundry workers were able to transform earlier solidarities into victory under the CIO.Carson prefers the more militant League of Women Shoppers to the WTUL, but she saves her admiration for dedicated women activists: Jewish communists Jessie Taft Smith and Beatrice Shapiro Lumpkin; and Black organizers Charlotte Adelmond, who was a Garveyite nationalist, and Dollie Lowther Robinson. Carson relies on oral interviews with Smith and Lumpkin to recover this history of interracial organizing and to assess various campaigns. She lauds the confrontational actions of the Laundry Workers Industrial Union that Smith and Lumpkin helped to build in 1933, which contributed to racial solidarities, bringing drivers and inside workers together across race and gender. She is partisan but still critical of the communists, especially their neglect of women's issues.Recovering the centrality of Black women is a major contribution. Trinidadian-born “tough lady” Adelmond commanded rank-and-file loyalty (119). Robinson developed a friendship and support network with Adelmond and Maida Springer of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, even as she remained close to the WTUL and especially to Bessie Hillman of the ACWA. Running the Education Department of the Laundry Workers Joint Board (LWJB), Robinson would educate the whole worker to cultivate independence. “With Adelmond taking on the role of public provocateur, Robinson worked behind the scenes to create the space for her friend to continue her advocacy,” Carson observes (148). Neither would survive the consolidation of power in the hands of former driver Louis Simon and other white men in control of the LWJB. Reassigned to a lesser position within the union, Adelmond resigned in 1950, while Robinson would alternate working for unions and government over the next decades.Adelmond was one force affiliating the laundry workers with the anticommunist ACWA, whose interracial social unionism turned out to be less robust when it came to “local autonomy and organic leadership” than when the question was supporting the larger civil rights movement (131). Carson charts post–World War II tensions between “union democracy and union bureaucracy” that won modest gains but continued occupational segregation, worker disengagement, and dwindling membership—even as retail laundries and a reconfigured power laundry sector flourished (212). Despite changed legal and political environments, Carson finds a usable past for today's immigrant laundry workers in this history of “civil disobedience, impromptu walkouts and strikes, community alliances, and social and educational activities to build solidarities” (222). Social justice, she insists, is worth fighting for.
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