Chicago Socialism: The People's History
This comprehensive history examines more than a century of politics and protests from centennial garment workers to millennials with megaphones.
 
As the major industrial center of the Midwest, Chicago provided a welcome home for Socialism in America. The city provided a soapbox for firebrand speechmaking, a home for political exiles, and a springboard for activism. When Josephine Conger-Kaneko began printing The Socialist Woman in 1909 and then ran for alderwoman in 1914, she could appeal to an audience and an electorate sympathetic to the Socialist Party in unprecedented numbers.
 
But Chicago was also a stronghold of mercantile and political interests that were strongly opposed to the Socialist Party. As a result, the city frequently served as a pressure cooker for the nation’s economic and ideological tension. That tension boiled over in incidents like the 1886 Haymarket Riot, the 1894 Pullman Strike, and the 1919 Race Riots. And that same tension continues to dictate the terms of engagement for contemporary protest movements and labor disputes.
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Chicago Socialism: The People's History
This comprehensive history examines more than a century of politics and protests from centennial garment workers to millennials with megaphones.
 
As the major industrial center of the Midwest, Chicago provided a welcome home for Socialism in America. The city provided a soapbox for firebrand speechmaking, a home for political exiles, and a springboard for activism. When Josephine Conger-Kaneko began printing The Socialist Woman in 1909 and then ran for alderwoman in 1914, she could appeal to an audience and an electorate sympathetic to the Socialist Party in unprecedented numbers.
 
But Chicago was also a stronghold of mercantile and political interests that were strongly opposed to the Socialist Party. As a result, the city frequently served as a pressure cooker for the nation’s economic and ideological tension. That tension boiled over in incidents like the 1886 Haymarket Riot, the 1894 Pullman Strike, and the 1919 Race Riots. And that same tension continues to dictate the terms of engagement for contemporary protest movements and labor disputes.
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Chicago Socialism: The People's History

Chicago Socialism: The People's History

by Joseph Anthony Rulli
Chicago Socialism: The People's History

Chicago Socialism: The People's History

by Joseph Anthony Rulli

eBook

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Overview

This comprehensive history examines more than a century of politics and protests from centennial garment workers to millennials with megaphones.
 
As the major industrial center of the Midwest, Chicago provided a welcome home for Socialism in America. The city provided a soapbox for firebrand speechmaking, a home for political exiles, and a springboard for activism. When Josephine Conger-Kaneko began printing The Socialist Woman in 1909 and then ran for alderwoman in 1914, she could appeal to an audience and an electorate sympathetic to the Socialist Party in unprecedented numbers.
 
But Chicago was also a stronghold of mercantile and political interests that were strongly opposed to the Socialist Party. As a result, the city frequently served as a pressure cooker for the nation’s economic and ideological tension. That tension boiled over in incidents like the 1886 Haymarket Riot, the 1894 Pullman Strike, and the 1919 Race Riots. And that same tension continues to dictate the terms of engagement for contemporary protest movements and labor disputes.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781439667729
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 04/13/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Joseph Anthony Rulli is a transplanted Hoosier, living in Chicago since the fall of 2006. He has taught social studies, religion, philosophy and history at the high school level in Indiana. He began writing as a career upon his arrival to his second city and has had three short stories published: “The Meating” (New Stone Circle, 2009), “Delayed” (Echo Ink Review, 2009) and “With This Ring” (Over the Edge: The Edgy Writers Anthology, 2017); a stage play, Let Me Just Say This, performed in 2016; an electronic tour book, The Working Class Smells…So Do Roses, published online in 2014; and The Chicago Haymarket Affair (The History Press/Arcadia Publishing, 2016). He has written a regular column and cultural reviews for the Chicago Grid and Picture This Post. This work is his second book with The History Press/Arcadia Publishing.
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