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000WE-WY
Print
1. 
Cover image for Fight Like Hell
Format: 
eBook
Electronic Format: 
HTML, ADOBE EPUB, KINDLE
Language 
English
Audio disc
2022
Summary 
Teen Vogue labor columnist and independent journalist Kim Kelly tells a definitive history of the labor movement and the people, workers, organizers, and their allies-who risked everything to win fair wages, better working conditions, disability protections, and an eight-hour workday. That history is a 1972 clothing company strike that saw 4,000 Chicana laborers start a boycott that swept the nation. It is Ida Mae Stull's 1934 demand for the right to work in an Ohio coal mine alongside the men, and the enslaved Black women before her who weren't given a choice. It's Dorothy Lee Bolden's 1960s rise from domestic workers' union founder to White House anti-segregationist. It's Mother Jones on the picket lines, and Lucy Parsons, Marie Equi, Ben Fletcher, and Frank Little's militant battles against the ravages of capitalism. It's the flight attendants union that pushed to root out sexual assault in the skies and ended a 2019 federal government shutdown. It's the incarcerated workers organiz
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3. 
Cover image for Fight like hell :
Language 
English
Books
2022
Summary 
"Freed Black women organizing for protection in the Reconstruction-era South. Jewish immigrant garment workers braving deadly conditions for a sliver of independence. Asian American fieldworkers rejecting government-sanctioned indentured servitude across the Pacific. Incarcerated workers advocating for basic human rights and fair wages. The queer Black labor leader who helped orchestrate America's civil rights movement. These are only some of the working-class heroes who propelled American labor's relentless push for fairness and equal protection under the law. The names and faces of countless silenced, misrepresented, or forgotten leaders have been erased by time as a privileged few decide which stories get cut from the final copy: those of women, people of color, LGBTQIA people, disabled people, sex workers, prisoners, and the poor. In this definitive and assiduously researched work of journalism, Teen Vogue columnists and independent labor reporter Kim Kelly excavates that untold hi
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