Offering fresh insights into the history of labor policy, the New
Deal, feminism, and southern politics, Landon Storrs examines the
New Deal era of the National Consumers' League, one of the most
influential reform organizations of the early twentieth
century.
Founded in 1899 by affluent women concerned about the exploitation
of women wage earners, the National Consumers' League used a
strategy of "ethical consumption" to spark a successful movement
for state laws to reduce hours and establish minimum wages for
women. During the Great Depression, it campaigned to raise labor
standards in the unregulated, non-union South, hoping to discourage
the relocation of manufacturers to the region because of cheaper
labor and to break the downward spiral of labor standards
nationwide. Promoting regulation of men's labor as well as women's,
the league shaped the National Recovery Administration codes and
the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 but still battled the National
Woman's Party, whose proposed equal rights amendment threatened
sex-based labor laws.
Using the National Consumers' League as a window on the nation's
evolving reform tradition,
Civilizing Capitalism explores
what progressive feminists hoped for from the New Deal and why,
despite significant victories, they ultimately were
disappointed.