Reconsidering CIO Political Culture: Briggs Local 212 and the Sources of Militancy in the Early UAW
Publication Date
2010
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The recent consensus on political culture in the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) emphasizes the view that working-class or labor-movement consciousness took shape through broad ideological appeals tied to a shared national political culture and the opening provided by the New Deal. In contrast, this analysis highlights the significance to the CIO of a distinct form of working-class consciousness rooted in local experiences and workplace relationships. In particular, this article explores the political culture and significance of United Autoworkers (UAW) Local 212 from the late 1930s through World War II, revealing that those workers helped to shape the UAW even as they embraced a local identity of rank-and-file militancy and related political radicalism that was confidently at odds with the overall trajectory of New Deal labor relations endorsed by national union leaders.
Publication Title
Labor: Studies In Working-Class History Of The Americas
Volume
7
Issue
4
First Page
17
Last Page
43
DOI
10.1215/15476715-2010-027
Publisher Policy
pre-print, post-print
Recommended Citation
Williams, Charles, "Reconsidering CIO Political Culture: Briggs Local 212 and the Sources of Militancy in the Early UAW" (2010). SIAS Faculty Publications. 236.
https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/ias_pub/236