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Sunshine Was Never Enough

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Delving beneath Southern California’s popular image as a sunny frontier of leisure and ease, this book tells the dynamic story of the life and labor of Los Angeles’s large working class. In a sweep...
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  • 12 November 2012
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Delving beneath Southern California’s popular image as a sunny frontier of leisure and ease, this book tells the dynamic story of the life and labor of Los Angeles’s large working class. In a sweeping narrative that takes into account more than a century of labor history, John H. M. Laslett acknowledges the advantages Southern California’s climate, open spaces, and bucolic character offered to generations of newcomers. At the same time, he demonstrates that—in terms of wages, hours, and conditions of work—L.A. differed very little from America’s other industrial cities. Both fast-paced and sophisticated, Sunshine Was Never Enough shows how labor in all its guises—blue and white collar, industrial, agricultural, and high tech—shaped the neighborhoods, economic policies, racial attitudes, and class perceptions of the City of Angels.

Laslett explains how, until the 1930s, many of L.A.’s workers were under the thumb of the Merchants and Manufacturers Association. This conservative organization kept wages low, suppressed trade unions, and made L.A. into the open shop capital of America. By contrast now, at a time when the AFL-CIO is at its lowest ebb—a young generation of Mexican and African American organizers has infused the L.A. movement with renewed strength. These stories of the men and women who pumped oil, loaded ships in San Pedro harbor, built movie sets, assembled aircraft, and in more recent times cleaned hotels and washed cars is a little-known but vital part of Los Angeles history.

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Price: $27.95
Pages: 460
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 12 November 2012
ISBN: 9780520953871
Format: eBook
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List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgments

Introduction: Scope and Purpose

PART ONE: UNDER THE THUMB OF THE OPEN SHOP
1. Myth versus Reality in the Making of the Southern California Working Class, 1880–1903
2. "It’s Class War, without a Doubt": The Open Shop Battle Intensifies, 1904–1916
3. Grassroots Insurgencies and the Impact of World War I, 1905–1924
4. Moving to the "Industrial Suburbs": From Hollywood to South Gate, and from Signal Hill to the Citrus Belt, 1919–1929

PART TWO: ORGANIZED LABOR COMES INTO ITS OWN
5. Unemployment, Upton Sinclair’s EPIC Campaign, and the Search for a New Deal Political Coalition, 1929–1941
6. Raising Consciousness at the Workplace: Anglos, Mexicans, and the Founding of the Los Angeles CIO, 1933–1938
7. Battle Royal: AFL versus CIO, and the Decline of the Open Shop, 1936–1941
8. "Two Steps Forward, One Step Back"? L.A. Workers in World War II, 1941–1945

PART THREE: CULTURAL CHANGE AND THE EMERGENCE OF A NEW INDUSTRIAL ORDER
9. "Caught between Consumption and the Cold War": Rebuilding Working-Class Politics, 1945–1968
10. Employment, Housing, and the Struggle for Equality in the Era of Civil Rights, 1965–1980
11. Globalization, Labor’s Decline, and the Coming of a Service and High-Tech Economy, 1970–1994
12. False Dawn? L.A.’s Labor-Latino Alliance Takes Center Stage, 1990–2010

Conclusion: Comparative Reflections

Notes
Primary Sources
Index