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NO. 67 SPRING 2005SCHOLARLY CONTROVERSY: CLASS AND THE POLITICS OF IDENTITYFrom Syndicalism to Seattle: Class and the Politics of Identity (See Abstract)
Verity Burgmann On the Proletarian Identity of "A Woman Dressed as an Enormous Beetle" (See Abstract)
Mae M. Ngai Reply to Verity Burgmann (See Abstract)
Linda Gordon Identity Politics, Past and Present (See Abstract)
Wendell E. Pritchett Trashing Identity Politics: Does It Really Get Us Back to Class? (See Abstract)
Nelson Lichtenstein The Inevitably Cultural Politics of Class: A Response to Verity Burgmann (See Abstract)
Joseph Lowndes Kissing the Old Class Politics Goodbye (See Abstract)
Dorothy Sue Cobble Hard Times but No Hard Words: A Rejoinder (See Abstract)
Verity Burgmann Terror and Violence: The Dark Face of Spanish Anarchism (See Abstract)
Julián Casanova The Myth of the Peaceable Peasant in Northern Asturias, 1898-1914 (See Abstract)
Jorge Uria The End of Indenture? Asian Workers in the Australian Pearling Industry, 1901-1972 (See Abstract)
Julia Martinez Left Labor Agitators in the Pacific Rim of the Early Twentieth Century (See Abstract)
Francis Shor Sweated Labor Then and Now
William K. Tabb "Is It Labor or Is It Working Class?": The Midwest Labor and Working-Class History Colloquium
Christopher D. Cantwell and Jeffrey Helgeson American Labor and the Cold War: Grassroots Politics and Post War Political Culture,by Robert W. Cherny, William Issel, and Kieran Walash Taylor, eds.,
Reviewed by William Mello Brownsville, Brooklyn: Blacks, Jews, and the Changing Face of the Ghetto, by Wendell Pritchett
Reviewed by Eric Fure-Slocum
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