Over twenty years after its initial publication, Annelise Orleck's
Common Sense and a Little Fire continues to resonate with
its harrowing story of activism, labor, and women's history. Orleck
traces the personal and public lives of four immigrant women
activists who left a lasting imprint on American politics. Though
they have rarely made more than cameo appearances in previous
histories, Rose Schneiderman, Fannia Cohn, Clara Lemlich Shavelson,
and Pauline Newman played important roles in the emergence of
organized labor, the New Deal welfare state, adult education, and
the modern women's movement. Orleck takes her four subjects from
turbulent, turn-of-the-century Eastern Europe to the radical
ferment of New York's Lower East Side and the gaslit tenements
where young workers studied together. Orleck paints a compelling
picture of housewives' food and rent protests, of grim conditions
in the garment shops, of factory-floor friendships that laid the
basis for a mass uprising of young women garment workers, and of
the impassioned rallies working women organized for suffrage.
Featuring a new preface by the author, this new edition reasserts
itself as a pivotal text in twentieth-century labor history.