The Southern Key: Class, Race, and Radicalism in the 1930s and 1940s
Michael Goldfield
Published:
2020
Online ISBN:
9780190079352
Print ISBN:
9780190079321
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The Southern Key: Class, Race, and Radicalism in the 1930s and 1940s
Michael Goldfield
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Michael Goldfield
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288–330
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Published:
February 2020
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Goldfield, Michael, 'The Failure of Operation Dixie: The Poverty of Liberalism', The Southern Key: Class, Race, and Radicalism in the 1930s and 1940s (
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Abstract
Chapter 7 focuses on the failed attempt by unions after World War II to unionize the South, referred to informally as Operation Dixie. Contrary to much extant scholarship, the chapter regards Operation Dixie as an underfunded, misguided attempt at organizing; it was racially backward, had no understanding of what was necessary, and served largely as a primer on how not to organize. Rather than being a major turning point, Operation Dixie is shown to have been at best a coda to earlier failures in southern labor organizing and the end of major union growth in the United States, at least in the private sector.
Keywords: Operation Dixie, southern labor, textile industry, liberal union leaders
Subject
History of the Americas Political History
Collection: Oxford Scholarship Online
The Southern Key, Michael Goldfield. Oxford University Press (2020) © Michael Goldfield 2020DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190079321.001.0001
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