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Dialectic of Solidarity

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During World War II it appeared that American workers in uniform had all that was required to defend democracy on the battlefields yet, on the domestic front, the working class, as it turned out, w...
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  • 04 June 2008
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During World War II it appeared that American workers in uniform had all that was required to defend democracy on the battlefields yet, on the domestic front, the working class, as it turned out, was ideologically inconsistent when it came to democracy. Could battles against tyranny be won abroad only to lose the war back home? This was the question the Institute of Social Research (the famous “Frankfurt School”) asked in 1944 when it embarked upon an important study of the American working class. Dialectic of Solidarity draws upon unpublished research reports of the Frankfurt School and represents a unique and multidimensional view of the political imagination of the wartime American worker and the role of antisemitism as the 'spearhead of fascism.'
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Price: $185.00
Pages: 350
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Critical Social Sciences
Publication Date: 04 June 2008
ISBN: 9789004168862
Format: Hardcover
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[…] Mark Worrell’s Dialectic of Solidarity […] examines the Institute’s [Institute for Social Research] massive empirical research project on antisemitism among American workers during World War II. The project, which was based on interviews with over 900 workers mainly in wartime industrial centers such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Detroit, was carried through to completion but was never published and thus remains virtually unknown today. Worrell’s book, which is the only full-length study of the project in any language, fills this large gap in our knowledge of the history of the Frankfurt School and makes an important contribution to the much needed reassessment […] of the crucial role of empirical social research in Critical Theory.
John Abromeit, The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 85, No. 1 (March 2013), pp. 161-168
Mark P. Worrell, Ph.D. (2003) in Sociology, University of Kansas, is Assistant Professor of Sociology at SUNY Cortland.