首页> 外文学位 >The United Mine Workers of America moves west: Race, working class formation, and the discourse on cultural diversity in the Union Pacific coal towns of southern Wyoming, 1870--1930.
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The United Mine Workers of America moves west: Race, working class formation, and the discourse on cultural diversity in the Union Pacific coal towns of southern Wyoming, 1870--1930.

机译:美国的联合矿工向西移动:种族,工人阶级的形成,以及怀俄明州南部的联合太平洋煤矿城镇的文化多样性论述,1870--1930年。

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摘要

This study examines the racial, ethnic, and cultural dimensions of working class formation in the Union Pacific Coal Company towns. Working class formation in southern Wyoming took place in two stages. From the 1870s to the 1890s, American-born and northern European immigrant miners' opposition to the use of Chinese labor divided the working class along racial lines. In 1885, white miners in Rock Springs attacked Chinese miners imported by the coal company. The "Chinese Massacre" stands as the most infamous of many anti-Chinese riots in the American West during the 1880s.; A second stage of working class formation began in the late 1890s, as the Union Pacific Coal Company recruited miners from a wider variety of racial and ethnic groups. The convergence of African American, Japanese, Mexican, and southern and eastern European workers in southern Wyoming, combined with the UMWA's move west, prompted workers to redefine themselves as a class. In 1907, the UMWA in southern Wyoming gained union recognition and, at the same time, admitted Japanese and Chinese miners into its ranks. Over the next decade, unionists developed a language and practice of cultural inclusiveness that strengthened the working class. Members of racial and ethnic groups gained opportunities to participate in union and community affairs on an equal footing. The labor movement in southern Wyoming succeeded in putting the Union Pacific Coal Company on the defensive.; World War I narrowed opportunities for cultural expression in the Union Pacific towns, and a postwar coal industry depression weakened the UMWA. The Union Pacific Coal Company reasserted its dominance. The discourse on diversity survived and continued to resonate among coal town residents, but the union no longer controlled it. Company officials took up the discourse in order to broaden the company's influence among working-class immigrants and foster cooperation among diverse groups of workers in an intensely nativist postwar climate. At the same time, the company put into place a policy of hiring more American miners and became complicit in postwar racism against African Americans. Company practices tended to revive racial hierarchies that the union's campaign for inclusiveness had successfully submerged.
机译:本研究考察了Union Pacific Coal Company城镇工人阶级形成的种族,族裔和文化维度。怀俄明州南部的工人阶级的形成分为两个阶段。从1870年代到1890年代,出生于美国和北欧的移民矿工对使用中国劳工的反对将工人阶级按种族划分。 1885年,洛克斯普林斯的白人矿工袭击了由煤炭公司进口的中国矿工。 “中国大屠杀”是1880年代美国西部许多反华暴动中最臭名昭著的一次。工人阶级形成的第二阶段始于1890年代后期,当时联合太平洋煤炭公司从更广泛的种族和族裔群体中招募了矿工。非裔美国人,日本人,墨西哥人以及南欧和东欧工人在怀俄明州的汇聚,再加上UMWA的西迁,促使工人重新定义了自己的阶级。 1907年,怀俄明州南部的UMWA获得了工会的认可,并同时接纳了日本和中国的矿工。在接下来的十年中,工会主义者发展了一种语言和文化包容性的实践,从而加强了工人阶级。种族和族裔群体的成员有机会平等参加工会和社区事务。怀俄明州南部的工人运动成功地使联合太平洋煤炭公司处于防御状态。第一次世界大战使联盟太平洋城镇的文化表达机会变窄,战后煤炭行业的萧条削弱了UMWA。联合太平洋煤炭公司重申了自己的统治地位。关于多样性的论述幸存下来,并在煤炭镇居民中继续引起共鸣,但工会不再控制它。公司官员进行了演讲,目的是扩大公司在工人阶级移民中的影响力,并在战后极度本土主义的氛围中促进不同工人群体之间的合作。同时,公司制定了雇用更多美国矿工的政策,并成为战后针对非裔美国人的种族主义的同谋。公司的做法往往会恢复种族等级制度,而工会的包容性运动已成功地淹没了种族等级制度。

著录项

  • 作者

    Aiken, Ellen Schoening.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Colorado at Boulder.;

  • 授予单位 University of Colorado at Boulder.;
  • 学科 History United States.; Sociology Social Structure and Development.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2002
  • 页码 356 p.
  • 总页数 356
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 美洲史;社会结构和社会关系;
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:46:30
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