"Negro and white, unite and fight!" : a social history of industrial unionism in meatpacking, 1930-90 /
Roger Horowitz.
- Urbana : University of Illinois Press, c1997.
- xvi, 373 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
- The working class in American history .
Includes bibliographical references (p. [287]-356) and index.
Introduction: "Only If You Stay Together": Class, Unionism, and America's Packinghouse Workers. 1. Purveyors to a Nation: Capital and Labor in the Meatpacking Industry -- Pt. 1. "CIO, Let's Go!": The Origins of Industrial Unionism in Meatpacking. 2. "We Worked for Everything We Got": The Origins of Packinghouse Unionism in Austin, Minnesota. 3. "They Just Had to Deal with the Union": Organizing in the Chicago Stockyards. 4. "Without a Union, We're All Lost": The Origins of Packinghouse Unionism in Kansas City. 5. "We Had to Have Somebody Behind Us": The Origins of Packinghouse Unionism in Sioux City, Iowa. 6. "So That Your Children Will Not Have to Slave as We Have": The Struggle for an International Union -- Pt. 2. "All That Capitalism Would Allow": The Era of the United Packinghouse Workers of America. 7. "We Are Not Asking for Favors": World War II and the Consolidation of a Democratic UPWA. 8. "Something New Is Added": Surviving Labor's Cold War, 1946-50. 9. "This Community of Our Union": Shop-floor Power and Social Unionism in the Postwar UPWA -- Pt. 3. The Return to the "Jungle" 10. "My Scars Are Many": The Decline of Industrial Unionism in Meatpacking, 1955-90 -- Conclusion: "For Your Future and Mine": Workers, Unions, and the Meatpacking Industry of the Twenty-first Century.