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Title: Eight Hours for What We Will : Workers and Leisure in an Industrial City, 1870-1920 by Roy Rosenzweig ISBN: 0-521-31397-X Publisher: Cambridge University Press Pub. Date: 31 October, 1985 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $25.00 |
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Summary: Leisure Among the Working Class
Comment: It is interesting how the focus of leisure has changed among social historians to include elements of working-class leisure. In Eight Hours for What We Will: Workers & Leisure in an Industrial City, 1870-1920 by Roy Rosenzweig. Rosenzweig first offers theories as to why labor historians have traditionally shied away from studying leisure as an academic subject, citing the silliness and frivolity old-fashioned academics associate with the subject. After referring to these types of intellectuals as "narrow-minded,' Rozenzweig continues to use the town of Worcester, Massachusetts to discover what constituted pastimes and amusement for Worcester workers by asking three questions. The first asks what have been the traditional values among the American working class, the second asks about the character of interclass relations in America's industrial communities, and the third question asks how class culture and relations changed from the nineteenth century to the twentieth. By examining these questions, Rosenzweig believes that a town like Worcester "offers the best opportunity for capturing workers' lives in all their complexity." (Rosenzweig, 3)
The first two sections of Eight Hours for What We Will are concerned with the saloon and the effect of temperance on workers as well as the use of July Fourth celebrations "to mark out [Worcester's immigrants'] cultural distance not only from the city's elite and native middle class but also from fellow immigrants. (Rosenzweig, 65-86)
Eventually, Rosenzweig writes about how interrelationships of workers led to the rise of a leisure market, an outgrowth of both the saloon and Fourth of July celebrations. One of Rosenzweig's main arguments is that the development of amusement park, continual importance of saloons as leisure arenas, and the beginning of a film culture were all a gradual process that grew with the Worcester community itself. Less a study on the nature of leisure, Rosenzweig effectively indicates how leisure is transformed within the bounds of a working class community.
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Title: Black Culture and Black Consciousness: Afro-American Folk Thought from Slavery to Freedom by Lawrence W. Levine ISBN: 0195023749 Publisher: Oxford Press Pub. Date: February, 1978 List Price(USD): $18.95 |
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Title: Peru's Indian Peoples and the Challenge of Spanish Conquest: Huamanga to Sixteen Forty by Steve J. Stern ISBN: 0299141845 Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press Pub. Date: December, 1993 List Price(USD): $19.95 |
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Title: Work and Revolution in France : The Language of Labor from the Old Regime to 1848 by William H. Sewell Jr. ISBN: 0521299519 Publisher: Cambridge University Press Pub. Date: 31 October, 1980 List Price(USD): $28.00 |
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Title: Gender and the Politics of History by Joan Wallach Scott ISBN: 0231118570 Publisher: Columbia University Press Pub. Date: 15 September, 1999 List Price(USD): $20.50 |
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Title: Cheap Amusements: Working Women and Leisure in Turn-Of-The-Century New York by Kathy Peiss ISBN: 0877225001 Publisher: Temple Univ Press Pub. Date: April, 1987 List Price(USD): $20.95 |
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