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NO. 63 SPRING 2003LABOR HISTORY AFTER THE GENDER TURN
Issue CoordinatorsThomas Miller Klubock and Peter Winn IntroductionPeter Winn
INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER AND LABOR IN THE UNITED STATES AND WESTERN EUROPE
IntroductionSonya Rose
From Gender to Racialized Gender: Laboring Bodies that Matter Eileen Boris
Dislodging the Center/Complicating the Dialectic: What Gender and Race Have Done to the Study of Labor Laura Tabili
Labor History after the Gender Turn: Transatlantic Cross Currents and Research Agendas Laura L. Frader
Still Two Trains Passing in the Night? Labor and Gender in German Historiography Eric D. Weitz
GENDER, THE WORKING CLASS, AND THE HISTORY OF THE POST-REVOLUTIONARY STATE IN MEXICO
IntroductionThomas Miller Klubock
Miracle Workers: Gender and State Mediation among Textile and Garment Workers in Mexico's Transition to Industrial Development Jocelyn Olcott
Masculine Bonds and Modern Mothers: The Rationalization of Gender in the Textile Industry in Puebla, 1940-1952 Susan M. Gauss
Once We Were Corn Grinders: Women and Labor in the tortilla Industry of Guadalajara, 1920-1940 María Teresa Fernandez-Aceves
Gender, Work, and Working-Class Women's Culture in the Veracruz Coffee Export Industry, 1920-1945 Heather Fowler-Salamini
REVIEW ESSAY
Old Questions, New Approaches: Recent Work in French Labor History Keith Mann
REPORTS AND CORRESPONDENCE
Justice at Work: A Conference Honoring David Brody John Baranski
How Class Works Andrew B. Arnold
BOOK REVIEWS
Capital Moves: RCA's Seventy-Year Quest for Cheap Labor
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