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Librería: MAGICBOOKS, Plélan-le-Grand, Francia
Paris : Société mutuelle d'édition, 1920. 292pp. Broché (qqs. rousseurs sur la couv). Très bon état // Wrps (covers sl. foxing, a very good copy). "La révolution sociale n'est qu'une profonde transformation consciente et méthodique qui fait la loi juste, la loi du Travail devant laquelle s'inclinera librement tout homme capable de justice.".
Publicado por S.W.O.C. District No. 3, [Fairfield?], 1940
Librería: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
First Edition. Mimeographed, side-stapled sheets, 11" x 8-1/2"; 6pp; printed recto-only. Text toned with chips to extremities; but of rust to staples; Good and sound. Ink signature of a "Dolph Mosley / Fairfield" to front cover. Report to the second annual convention of the S.W.O.C., documenting the union's successes in the southern states during its first year of existence and as well as union-busting activities which as might be imagined were rampant throughout the south during this period, especially against a C.I.O.-affiliated union with a reputation for radicalism and a racial integration. A locus of anti-labor sentiment appears to have been the industrial community of Gadsden, Alabama, where the authors document numerous instances of direct threats against steelworkers, including some that were racially motivated. Rare; as in our experience is most southern steelworkers material from this period.