Grand Army of Labor: Workers, Veterans, and the Meaning of the Civil War

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Enlisting memory in a new fight for freedom

From the Gilded Age through the Progressive era, labor movements reinterpreted Abraham Lincoln as a liberator of working people while workers equated activism with their own service fighting for freedom during the war. Matthew E. Stanley explores the wide-ranging meanings and diverse imagery used by Civil War veterans within the sprawling radical politics of the time. As he shows, a rich world of rituals, songs, speeches, and newspapers emerged among the many strains of working class cultural politics within the labor movement. Yet tensions arose even among allies. Some people rooted Civil War commemoration in nationalism and reform, and in time, these conservative currents marginalized radical workers who tied their remembering to revolution, internationalism, and socialism.

An original consideration of meaning and memory, Grand Army of Labor reveals the complex ways workers drew on themes of emancipation and equality in the long battle for workers’ rights.

Author(s): Matthew E. Stanley
Series: Working Class in American History, 1
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 320
City: Champaign

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Second Great Emancipator
Chapter 1. King Labor: Workers Imagine Emancipation beyond Equality
Chapter 2. Southern Palm, Northern Pine: Greenbackers and the Reconciliation of Class
Chapter 3. Against Masters and Money Power: The Knights of Labor and Wage Slavery
Chapter 4. The Red Flag of Emancipation: Socialism and Revolutionary Memory
Chapter 5. The Blue-Gray Campaign:
Populism and White Reunion
Chapter 6. Citadel of Labor: The American Federation of Labor and Reformist Memory
Chapter 7. The Blue and the Gray and the Red: The Rise and Repression of Proletarian Memory
Epilogue:
Resurrecting John Brown’s Body
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Back cover