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Beyond Norma Rae: How Puerto Rican and Southern White Women Fought for a Place the American Working Class
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Barnes and Noble
Beyond Norma Rae: How Puerto Rican and Southern White Women Fought for a Place the American Working Class
Current price: $99.00
Barnes and Noble
Beyond Norma Rae: How Puerto Rican and Southern White Women Fought for a Place the American Working Class
Current price: $99.00
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Size: Hardcover
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In the late 1970s, Hollywood producers took the published biography of Crystal Lee Sutton, a white southern textile worker, and transformed it into a blockbuster 1979 film,
, featuring Sally Field in the title role. This fascinating book reveals how the film and the popular icon it created each worked to efface the labor history that formed the foundation of the film's story. Drawing on an impressive range of sources—union records, industry reports, film scripts, and oral histories—Aimee Loiselle's cutting-edge scholarship shows how gender, race, culture, film, and mythology have reconfigured and often undermined the history of the American working class and its labor activism. While
constructed a powerful image of individual defiance by a white working-class woman, Loiselle demonstrates that female industrial workers across the country and from diverse racial backgrounds understood the significance of cultural representation and fought to tell their own stories. Loiselle painstakingly reconstructs the underlying histories of working women in this era and makes clear that cultural depictions must be understood as the complicated creations they are.