Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Uncovering Labor’s History
Part I. In Practice: Collecting and Interpreting the History for the Public
Chapter 1. Public Memory and the West Virginia Mine Wars Museum
Chapter 2. Interpreting Barre, Vermont’s Granite Industry in All Its Rich Complexity
Chapter 3. Lawrence, Massachusetts, and the 1912 Bread & Roses Strike at Street Level: Interpretation Over Time
Chapter 4. “Like a Family” or “A Committee of Half-Starved Human Beings”: Multiple Perspectives in Interpreting Southern Mill Labor History
Chapter 5. History, Memory, and Community in the Redeveloped Loray Mill
Chapter 6. “Cut Off from Fair Play”: Representing Labor Issues in the Context of the Elaine Massacre
Chapter 7. Corrective Collecting and Democratizing Documentation: Preserving, Interpreting, and Promoting Regional Workers' History at the Labor Archives of Washington
Part II: Writing the History
Chapter 8. Labor History and the National Park Service: How the Government Does and Does Not Remember Our Working Past
Chapter 9. The Southern Tenant Farmers Museum and the Difficult History of Agricultural Organizing
Chapter 10. Labor Sweated Here: Commemorating Workers and Their Activism in Paterson, New Jersey
Chapter 11. Latinx Murals of Texas: Memorials to Immigrant Experience, Working-Class
History, and Solidarity
Chapter 12. Labor and Art: Interpreting the Maine Labor Mural Controversy
Contributors
Index
Back cover