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Constant Turmoil: The Politics of Industrial Life in Nineteenth-Century New England. (Reviews).


Constant Turmoil: The Politics of Industrial Life in Nineteenth-Century New England. By Mary H. Blewett (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2000. x plus 521 pp.).

This most recent book by Mary H. Blewett, a leading student of workers' encounters with industrialism in nineteenth- and twentieth-century New England, may be her most ambitious effort to date. It is a volume grand in scale, rich in attention to detail, and provocative in its analytical insights. Professor Blewett has chosen a large canvas for this book, telling the story of the contested history of the New England textile industry from the perspectives of both workers and managers over the course of a century. Although it is centered on the history of labor struggles in the textile mills of Fall River, Massachusetts, her tale ranges across southern New England to take in unfolding events from the cotton mills of Rhode Island's Blackstone Valley to the meeting rooms of Boston labor activists, such as Ira Steward, who led the nineteenth-century campaign for the eight-hour work day. At the same time, Blewett's tale leads her across the Atlantic to the Lancashire Lancashire (lăng`kəshĭr, –shər), county (1991 pop. 1,365,100), 1,878 sq mi (4,864 sq km), N England, on the Irish Sea. The county town is Lancaster. homeland that produced so many labor leaders amon 1 King of Judah (642–640 B.C.), son and successor of Manasseh. According to Chronicles, he was inattentive to the worship of God, and the accounts accordingly denounce him strongly. However, his worship of other gods indicates that he, like his father, was an Assyrian vassal. Amon was murdered, and Josiah succeeded him.

2 In the Bible, Ahab's governor of Samaria.
 g New England mule spinners as well as into the boardrooms of Fall River Fall River, industrial city (1990 pop. 92,703), Bristol co., SE Mass., a port of entry on Mt. Hope Bay, at the mouth of the Taunton River; settled 1656, set off from Freetown 1803, inc. as a city 1854. It was once the foremost cotton textile center in the United States; the first cotton mill was built in 1811. Textiles and clothing are the leading manufactures, and a variety of products are made, including metals and chemicals. manufacturers like the legendary Borden family. The breadth of this book is truly remarkable.

Also distinguishing this volume is Blewett's sensitive understanding of changing working-class gender relations. Readers of Blewett's pioneering work, Men, Women, and Work: Class, Gender, and Protest in the New England Shoe Industry, 1780-1910 (1990)--in many ways a companion piece for her latest book--should scarcely be surprised by this. Constant Turmoil demonstrates that Blewett has grown even more skilled in the application of gender analysis to workers' lives since the publication of Men, Women, and Work, now applying the insights of a literature on the gendering of the American working class that has grown remarkably since 1990, particularly in its concern with class and masculinity. In Constant Turmoil Blewett shows the extent to which immigrant women and men adapted protest traditions from Lancashire or less militant strategies from French Canada to the needs of their families in the often chaotic American print textile industry. In the process she suggests how "working-class masculinity and femininit y took different, contested forms" in nineteenth-century New England, stressing "the contingencies, not the inevitabilities, in the meaning of gender, the direction of labor politics, and the definitions of appropriate working-class family relations in nineteenth-century America" (p. 224).

As a work of labor history, Blewett's book also stands out for its attention to the network of families who owned and operated Fall River textile mills during the industry's prime. Tracing the rise of the Borden and Durfee families, Blewett shows how they constructed a patrimony that eventually included "the invention of a local privileged social set and municipal political dominance, which they had the wealth and power to defend" (p. 150). Blewett also illuminates the decline of the entrepreneurial capitalism that had fueled Fall River's growth by tracing the downfall of families like the Bordens. From its victimization by a defalcating son-in-law in the 1870s to the grisly 1892 murder of Andrew J. Borden by his infamous, axe-wielding daughter, Lizzie, the troubled Borden family illustrated how precarious the textile manufacturing elite's position often was. Including the story of such managerial families lends Constant Turmoil a balanced quality and deepens the book's narrative of the contest for power in N ew England textiles.

Despite its many strengths, however, Constant Turmoil suffers to some degree from its ambitious reach. This is apparent in two ways. First, the book is weakened by Blewett's intervention in nearly a dozen different historiographical debates through her narrative. Each chapter of Constant Turmoil opens with a discourse on one influential historical study, offers a critique of that study and related literature, and then indicates how the evidence from the New England textile industry bears on the debate in question. Some of these debates, it turns out, are quite dated (such as those sparked by Norman Ware's The Industrial Worker [1924], David Montgomery's Beyond Equality [1967], or Louis Galambos's Competition and Cooperation [1966]). Rather than focusing on the most pertinent findings of her study of southern New England textiles, Blewett engages too many debates that long ago passed their prime. Men, Women, and Work was remarkable for its ability to defamiliarize the oft-told story of Lynn shoemakers by bring ing gender analysis to bear. But quite a different effect is produced by Blewett's preoccupation with less-than-novel historiographical debates in Constant Turmoil. Because so much of her story about the rise of skilled workers' unions from decades of inclusive labor protest is made to speak to debates that have lost their excitement, Blewett's account may cause some readers shrug and ask: Why should we care about this story? What is new here? This is unfortunate, because Blewett in fact infuses her narrative with more fresh insight than these dated historiographical preoccupations would suggest.

Blewett's multiple scholarly engagements also contribute to the second weakness of Constant Turmoil: this book's narrative arc could have been considerably tighter. This is evident especially in the book's sometimes excessive attention to detail, This particular characteristic, combined with Constant Turmoil's multiple historiographical ambitions, makes the volume less readable than one would hope. To Blewett's credit, she makes every effort to preserve the colorful facts that bring her characters to life in a book that surveys labor conflict in New England textiles over the span of a century. The truly massive research Blewett has undertaken for this volume has furnished her a wealth of such information--right down to the menu served at the 1874 coming-of-age party of a scion of one of Fall River's leading families. But too often Constant Turmoil bogs down in details that are merely shared with the reader rather than marshaled in the service of the book's larger narrative. Thus, for example, readers learn th at due to the textile mills' pollution of the Quequechan River "associate judge of the Massachusetts supreme judicial court, James M. Morton, was forced to give up fly fishing for black bass in North Pond" (p. 163). As this mention of angling habits suggests, this book might have profited from a more rigorous editing. As it is, most teachers are likely to find Constant Turmoil too cumbersome for use in undergraduate courses in labor or social history.

It would be unfortunate, though, if Blewett's densely detailed narrative and numerous historiographical concerns were to win a smaller readership for Constant Turmoil than her fine scholarship merits. By any measure, this is still an outstanding book. With the publication of Constant Turmoil Mary Blewett has again demonstrated the power of her historical imagination, giving us an insightful, deeply informed, and sympathetic study of workers and managers in a critical nineteenth-century American industry. Indeed, Professor Blewett has set a high standard for her fellow scholars to emulate.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Journal of Social History
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Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:McCartin, Joseph A.
Publication:Journal of Social History
Date:Sep 22, 2002
Words:1152
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