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The 1920s Through the Looking Glass of Gender: A Response to David Montgomery

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2008

Susan Porter Benson
Affiliation:
University of Missouri-Columbia

Abstract

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Type
Scholarly Controversies
Copyright
Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 1987

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References

NOTES

My thanks to Tani Barlow, Edward Benson, Dina Copelman, David Roediger, and Sharon Strom for their extraordinarily helpful and perceptive comments on a draft of this critique.

1. Frederickson, Mary, “‘I Know Which Side I'm On’: Southern Women in the Labor Movement in the Twentieth Century,” in Women, Work and Protest: A Century of U.S. Women's Labor History, ed. Milkman, Ruth (Boston, 1985), 164.Google Scholar

2. Kessler-Harris, Alice, “Problems of Coalition-Building: Women and Trade Unions in the 1920s,” in Women, Work and Protest: A Century of U.S. Women's Labor History, 126.Google Scholar

3. Sealander, Judith, As Minority Becomes Majority: Federal Reaction to the Phenomenon of Women in the Work Force, 1920–1963 (Westport, Conn., 1983).Google Scholar

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7. Kornbluh, Joyce L. and Frederickson, Mary, Sisterhood and Solidarity: Workers' Education for Women, 1914–1984 (Philadelphia, 1984).Google Scholar

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13. On office work, see Strom, Sharon, Beyond the Typewriter: Women and the Transformation of Office Work (forthcoming).Google Scholar

14. I make this argument in “‘The Clerking Sisterhood’: Rationalization and the Work Culture of Saleswomen in American Department Stores, 1890–1960,” Radical America 12 (03-04 1978)Google Scholar, repr. in Workers' Struggles, Past and Present: A “Radical America” Reader, ed. Green, James (Philadelphia, 1983).Google Scholar Sharon Strom develops this point in her forthcoming book.

15. Benson, Susan Porter, Counter Cultures: Saleswomen, Managers, and Customers in American Department Stores, 1890–1940 (Urbana, 1986), 164–65.Google Scholar

16. Strom, , Beyond the Typewriter.Google Scholar

17. “Vital Need of the Salespeople Today,” 16.Google Scholar

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19. Conway, H. J., “A Woman May Change Her Mind,” Retail Clerks International Advocate 29 (09 1922): 15.Google Scholar

20. Conway, H. J., “Not How Much But How Little,” Retail Clerks International Advocate 29 (04 1922): 16.Google Scholar