Purchasing power: consumer organizing, gender, and the
Seattle labor movement, 1919–1929. By
Dana Frank. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994. Pp. xii+349.
ISBN 0-521-38367-6. £50.00. Paperback 0-521-46714-4. £16.95.
New Deals: business, labor, and politics in America, 1920–1935.
By Colin Gordon. New York:
Cambridge University Press, 1994. Pp. xii+329. ISBN 0-521-45122-1. £40.00.
Paperback 0-521-45755-6. £15.95.
The long war: the intellectual People's Front and anti-Stalinism,
1930–1940. By Judy Kutulas.
Durham: Duke University Press, 1995. Pp. xiv+334. ISBN 0-8223-1526-2. $39.95
Paperback 0-8223-1524-6. £16.95.
The invisible empire in the West: toward a new historical
appraisal of the Ku Klux Klan of the
1920s. Ed. by Shawn Lay. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992.
Pp. 230.
ISBN 0-252-01832-X. $32.50.
‘We are all leaders’: the alternative unionism of
the early 1930s. Ed. by Staughton Lynd.
Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1996. Pp. 343. ISBN 0-252-02243-2.
$44.95
Paperback 0-252-06547-6. $17.95.
Stalin's famine and Roosevelt's recognition of Russia.
By M. Wayne Morris. Lanham, MD:
University Press of America, 1994. Pp. ix+224. ISBN 0-8191-9379-8. $34.50.
Building a democratic political order: reshaping American
liberalism in the 1930s and 1940s. By
David Plotke. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. xi+388.
ISBN 0-521-42059-8. £40.00.
Forging new freedoms; nativism, education, and the constitution,
1917–1927. By William G. Ross.
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1994. Pp. x+277. ISBN 0-8032-3900-9.
$35.
Liberals and communism: the ‘red decade’ revisited.
By Frank A. Warren. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1993; originally published 1966. Pp. xxiii+276.
ISBN 0-231-08444-7. $45.00. Paperback 0-231-08445-5. $19.00.
Frank, Lay et al., and Ross all deal with the aftermath of the United
States's brief
involvement in the First World War, and some of its enduring effects –
political reaction
with devastating results for the labour movement and progressive politics,
brutalization
of America's then-normal nativism, directed at members of the recent
immigrant
communities making up about a third of its population.