Labour Goes to War

The CIO and the Construction of a New Social Order, 1939-45

By Wendy Cuthbertson
Categories: Gender & Sexuality Studies, Women’s Studies, History, Canadian History, Military History, Political Science, Security, Peace & Conflict Studies
Series: Studies in Canadian Military History
Publisher: UBC Press, Canadian War Museum
Hardcover : 9780774823425, 240 pages, June 2012
Paperback : 9780774823432, 240 pages, January 2013
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774823449, 240 pages, June 2012

Table of contents

Introduction

1 “A Trifle Depressing”: The CIO on the Eve of War

2 Organizing the Unorganized in Wartime

3 Wartime Organizing: Getting to a Majority

4 “Becoming Unionized as Well as Organized”: Union Sociability, the Transmission of Ideas, and the Creed of Equality

5 “The War for the Common Man”: The CIO’s Narrative of a Fulfilled Democracy

6 “Equal Partners in This World Crusade”: Women, Equal Pay, and the CIO

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index

A fascinating look at the cultural and economic forces behind the explosive growth of the CIO in Canada during the Second World War.

Description

During the Second World War, the Congress of Industrial Organizations in Canada grew from a handful of members to more than a quarter-million. What was it about the “good war” that brought about this phenomenal growth? Labour Goes to War argues that both economic and cultural forces were at work. Labour shortages gave workers greater economic power in the workplace. But cultural factors – workers’ patriotism, ties to those on active service, and allegiance to the “people’s war” – also fueled the CIO’s growth. The complex, often contradictory, motives of workers during this period left the Canadian labour movement with an ambivalent progressive/conservative legacy.

Reviews

Although the CIO began the Second World War on precarious ground, by 1945 it had become a powerhouse. Labour Goes to War explains how this transformation took place, offering original insight into the making of the Canadian labour movement during the war years. Drawing on the reconstruction rhetoric of the peoples’ war for democracy, the CIO expanded its own commitment to equality rights for women and minorities and promoted a new language of social entitlement for working people.

- Joan Sangster, author of Transforming Labour: Women and Work in Postwar Canada