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Fletcher Agency
Melissa Chinchillo |
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Original language | |
English |
ON THE LINE
A Story of Class, Solidarity, and Two Women's Epic Fight to Build a Union
Raised during the final days of the auto and steelwork industries in rural Ohio, Daisy became increasingly aware of how the rigged economic system that failed workers in her own community was part of a global phenomenon affecting workers around the world. She began organizing, devoting herself to fighting for the rights of people who worked under hazardous and unfair conditions. As the youngest organizing director in the history of UNITE, one of the largest international workers’ unions, she led the drive to reform the industrial laundry industry, where heavy machinery and cheap, grueling labor are used to clean huge volumes of hospital, hotel, and restaurant linens and where injury and even death on the job are shockingly common.
Daisy found a fierce ally in Argelia Gomez Ramirez, an undocumented immigrant from Mexico working at a hospital laundry in Arizona. Argelia led her coworkers in a fight for basic rights: machines with intact safety guards; gloves and goggles to protect them from the syringes or scalpels that often tumbled out with hospital linens. But under Argelia’s fearless leadership, “union” meant something more than just conditions at work. She believed in the power of community: she organized meal trains for sick or injured colleagues; she set up a phone tree in case of domestic violence – and showed up with a baseball bat when she got the call. The solidarity that grew out of this campaign was tangible, a bond that rhetoric alone could not achieve, and the two women grew fiercely close over the course of the brutal campaign to force the management company to recognize their union.
The work of labor organizing is deeply reliant on the power of storytelling, spinning tales of moral outrage, fierce courage, and victory from labor history in order to activate workers’ anger and demonstrate how unions can create real change. Daisy turns a critical eye on this tidy use of the past, and especially the role of immigrant women in shaping it, through the story of her and Argelia’s campaign.
INTO FLAMES comes at a moment of long-overdue confrontation with powerful forces of injustice. A century ago, facing the same economic conditions, workers launched militant strikes that founded the unions that remain the largest resources for labor organizing today. In a moment of unprecedented momentum for the labor movement, Pitkin offers a critical look at how we can learn from the past and what it will take to win for the workers fighting for justice today.
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Book
Published 2022-03-29 by Algonquin |