This is the first systematic study of strikebreaking, intimidation,
and anti-unionism in the United States, subjects essential to a
full understanding of labor's fortunes in the twentieth century.
Paradoxically, the country that pioneered the expansion of civil
liberties allowed corporations to assemble private armies to
disrupt union organizing, spy on workers, and break strikes. Using
a social-historical approach, Stephen Norwood focuses on the
mercenaries the corporations enlisted in their anti-union
efforts--particularly college students, African American men, the
unemployed, and men associated with organized crime. Norwood also
considers the paramilitary methods unions developed to counter
mercenary violence. The book covers a wide range of industries
across much of the country.
Norwood explores how the early twentieth-century crisis of
masculinity shaped strikebreaking's appeal to elite youth and the
media's romanticization of the strikebreaker as a new soldier of
fortune. He examines how mining communities' perception of
mercenaries as agents of a ribald, sexually unrestrained, new urban
culture intensified labor conflict. The book traces the ways in
which economic restructuring, as well as shifting attitudes toward
masculinity and anger, transformed corporate anti-unionism from
World War II to the present.