Experts has a new look! Let us know what you think of the updates.

Provide feedback
Home
Scholarly Works
Distress, Dissent and Alienation : Hamilton...
Conference

Distress, Dissent and Alienation : Hamilton Workers in the Great Depression

Abstract

Contrary to most accounts of Canadian workers' responses to the Great Depression of the 1930s, this article portrays the majority of Hamilton workers as neither severely distressed nor especially prone to dissent. Much of the relative absence of dissent can be attributed to workers' powerlessness in very poor market conditions, but workers' quiescence should not be seen simply as a temporary, class-conscious strategy. Rather, many, perhaps …

Authors

Archibald WP

Volume

21

Pagination

pp. 3-32

Publisher

University of Toronto Press

Publication Date

10 1992

DOI

10.7202/1019244ar

Conference proceedings

Urban History Review

Issue

1

ISSN

0703-0428