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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: James Naylor , Rhonda L. Hinther , Jim MochorukPublisher: University of Manitoba Press Imprint: University of Manitoba Press Dimensions: Width: 14.90cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 26.10cm Weight: 0.363kg ISBN: 9780887552991ISBN 10: 0887552994 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 16 September 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction Chapter 1 “Strike or Revolution” Redux: The Historiography of the Winnipeg General Chapter 2 In the Water: Race, Empire, and the Winnipeg General Strike Chapter 3 From Patriotism to Insurgency: The Shifting Allegiances of Winnipeg 1919’s Striker-Soldiers Chapter 4 Winnipeg Jews and the General Strike: “Adapt to the Institutions and the Manners of the Country” Chapter 5 The Edmonton General Strike Chapter 6 The Winnipeg General Strike in the Crowsnest Pass Chapter 7 Montréal’s Civil War: The Municipal Workers’ Strike of 1918 Chapter 8 “Justice and Not Charity Should Be Your Demand!”: Montréal’s Unemployed and the Workers’ Revolt Chapter 9 The Kansas City General Strike: Wartime Solidarity in the American Midwest Chapter 10 The Seattle General Strike: Five Days that Matter Chapter 11 The Storm Before the Calm: Social and Political Upheaval in the Western Hemisphere Chapter 12 The Rural Nothing Worth Monkey Police, or the Winnipeg Origins of 100 Years of Canadian State Spying on Labour and the Left Chapter 13 Not by Repression Alone: Defeating the Workers’ Revolt by False Promises of Reform Chapter 14 Remembering 1919: Commemoration and the Winnipeg General Strike Chapter 15 Putting History to Work: Public History and Commemoration Chapter 16 The Winnipeg General Strike in the Twenty-First CenturyReviewsThe editors have skilfully woven together historical inquiries that move beyond the superficial analysis of what happened [during the conflict of 1919], and why, to a more critical look at who has been left out of the historical conversation, what has changed (if anything) and how local struggles for social justice don't occur in political vacuums. For a Better World asks the reader to contemplate on what it might take to make a more just society. --Matt Henderson Winnipeg Free Press "An important advance in scholarship on the Winnipeg strike and broader labour unrest in the late 1910s, For a Better World is also an example of how the diverse approaches and perspectives that often characterize edited collections can be a strength."" --Shannon Stunden Bower ""Prairie History"" ""For a Better World is notable for its chapters on other disputes that took place around the same time as Winnipeg's. Various authors describe events in Seattle, Kansas City, Montreal, and Edmonton, showing strong parallels in grievances and militancy among workers, despite their geographic separation."" --Victor Rabinovitch ""Canada's History"" ""The editors have skilfully woven together historical inquiries that move beyond the superficial analysis of what happened [during the conflict of 1919], and why, to a more critical look at who has been left out of the historical conversation, what has changed (if anything) and how local struggles for social justice don't occur in political vacuums. For a Better World asks the reader to contemplate on what it might take to make a more just society."" --Matt Henderson ""Winnipeg Free Press"" ""This diverse collection of essays... effectively complicates the historical record, adding the stories of Indigenous peoples, soldiers, Jews, popular memories and local unrest to the literature. [For a Better World] highlight[s] issues that should continue to animate discussions and debates about social change more than 100 years later. It is an excellent read."" --Roberta Lexier ""Alberta Views""" """This diverse collection of essays... effectively complicates the historical record, adding the stories of Indigenous peoples, soldiers, Jews, popular memories and local unrest to the literature. [For a Better World] highlight[s] issues that should continue to animate discussions and debates about social change more than 100 years later. It is an excellent read.""--Roberta Lexier ""Alberta Views"" ""The editors have skilfully woven together historical inquiries that move beyond the superficial analysis of what happened [during the conflict of 1919], and why, to a more critical look at who has been left out of the historical conversation, what has changed (if anything) and how local struggles for social justice don't occur in political vacuums. For a Better World asks the reader to contemplate on what it might take to make a more just society.""--Matt Henderson ""Winnipeg Free Press""" ""For a Better World is an important and useful collection to scholars of Canadian history, of the Canadian and American labour movements, and of the broader revolutionary moment of the second and third decades of the 20th century."" --Jonathan Weier ""JACANZS"" ""An important advance in scholarship on the Winnipeg strike and broader labour unrest in the late 1910s, For a Better World is also an example of how the diverse approaches and perspectives that often characterize edited collections can be a strength."" --Shannon Stunden Bower ""Prairie History"" ""For a Better World is notable for its chapters on other disputes that took place around the same time as Winnipeg's. Various authors describe events in Seattle, Kansas City, Montreal, and Edmonton, showing strong parallels in grievances and militancy among workers, despite their geographic separation."" --Victor Rabinovitch ""Canada's History"" ""The editors have skilfully woven together historical inquiries that move beyond the superficial analysis of what happened [during the conflict of 1919], and why, to a more critical look at who has been left out of the historical conversation, what has changed (if anything) and how local struggles for social justice don't occur in political vacuums. For a Better World asks the reader to contemplate on what it might take to make a more just society."" --Matt Henderson ""Winnipeg Free Press"" ""This diverse collection of essays... effectively complicates the historical record, adding the stories of Indigenous peoples, soldiers, Jews, popular memories and local unrest to the literature. [For a Better World] highlight[s] issues that should continue to animate discussions and debates about social change more than 100 years later. It is an excellent read."" --Roberta Lexier ""Alberta Views"" Author InformationJames Naylor is a professor in the Department of History at Brandon University. Rhonda L. Hinther is a professor in the Department of History at Brandon University. Jim Mochoruk is the Chester Fritz Distinguished Professor of History at the University of North Dakota. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |