Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Strike Fever: Labor Unrest, Civil Rights and the Left in Atlanta, 1972

Waugh-Benton, Monica
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract

This thesis aims to provide a history of African American working class and Leftist activism in Atlanta, Georgia during the early 1970s. It places a series of wildcat strikes within the context of political and social transition, and charges unequal economic conditions and a racially charged discriminatory environment as primary causes. The legacies of both the Civil Rights Movement and the New Left are identified as key contributing factors to this wave of labor unrest. One path taken by former Civil Right activists was to focus on poor peoples’ movements, and one course taken by the 1960s-era New Left activists was to join forces with the working class in an attempt to build a New Communist movement. In Atlanta, these two forces converged and generated a notable force against some of city’s most prominent employers.

Comments
Description
Date
2006-08-03
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Collections
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
1970s, the sixties, Atlanta, Mead Corporation, Mao, Marxist-Leninist, Marxism, October League, Civil Rights Movement, Labor, Labor Unrest, Communism, the New Communist Movement, wildcat strike, working class, Hosea Williams, Maynard Jackson, Andrew Young, Tyrone Brooks, Nan Orrock, social movements
Citation
Waugh-Benton, Monica. "Strike Fever: Labor Unrest, Civil Rights and the Left in Atlanta, 1972." Thesis. Georgia State University, 2006. https://doi.org/10.57709/1059622
Embargo Lift Date
2012-01-26
Embedded videos