Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T00:53:08.475Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Brewing a Boycott: How a Grassroots Coalition Fought Coors and Remade American Consumer Activism. By Allyson P. Brantley. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2021. 304 pp. Halftones, notes, bibliography, index. Paperback, $29.95. ISBN: 978-1-4696-6103-2.

Review products

Brewing a Boycott: How a Grassroots Coalition Fought Coors and Remade American Consumer Activism. By Allyson P. Brantley. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2021. 304 pp. Halftones, notes, bibliography, index. Paperback, $29.95. ISBN: 978-1-4696-6103-2.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2022

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2022

This detailed history of the decades-long boycott against Coors should give anyone pause when ordering their next beer, especially if it is a “Silver Bullet” or other Coors product. Integrating archival records from activists, mainstream and grassroots periodicals, and oral history interviews, Allyson Brantley offers an illuminating account of how boycotters organized a diverse coalition to fight the anti-union, discriminatory practices of Coors and its neoliberal ideology. Her narrative offers valuable lessons on how activists can mobilize supporters via the tactic of the boycott to fight corporate power. However, it also provides insights into strategies that corporate leaders can employ to contest and ultimately co-opt boycotts, particularly boycotts that have divergent goals. Labor historians, social movement scholars, and researchers who study how politics influence consumer behavior will find notable contributions in Brantley's book.

The Coors boycott began as a labor boycott in 1957, when union workers at the Golden, Colorado, brewery used the tactic in coordination with a strike to demand higher wages and a stronger position when negotiating contracts with management. Neither materialized and though Coors permitted strikebreakers to keep their jobs, its employment policies became determinedly more anti-union and its politics increasing conservative. However, the boycott continued and gained support from Chicano and gay and lesbian grassroots activists, who aimed to challenge the company's discriminatory hiring and employment practices and embrace of the New Right. This coalition building helped to strengthen the power of the boycott, especially as it broadened from Colorado and the West to other parts of the country. But it also shifted the focus away from the interests of the union to identity-based rights, which ultimately fragmented boycotters. Coors took advantage of these internal divisions, continuing its anti-unionism at the same time its workforce became more diverse, its marketing campaigns more inclusive, and its commitment to conservative politics more pervasive.

So, was the boycott against Coors successful? Though boycotters did succeed at organizing a long-term, broad-based, coordinated movement and persevered “because they had fun and were bound together by anger, bitterness, and shared vision of liberation and solidarity,” they failed to make much difference on the shop floor for the union (p. 191). While sales dropped temporarily and its reputation suffered periodically, Coors was able to capitalize on divisions within the boycott coalition and rebrand itself as an exemplar of corporate social responsibility. Paradoxically, this rebranding could be interpreted as success for the boycotters, or at least for boycotters who were most concerned with discrimination at the company. Over the course of the boycott, Coors funded efforts to recruit more people of color, invested money in Black and Latino communities, extended employment benefits to partners in same-sex relationships, and sponsored numerous events for gay and lesbian organizations. Without pressure from the boycott coalition, Coors may not have been so eager to do so—at least until the company realized it was alienating a growing segment of its potential consumer base. Though ardent boycotters still refuse to purchase Coors products, the boycott has lost organizational support, perhaps most significantly from the AFL-CIO, which officially lifted its boycott against Coors in 1987.

Brantley's research on the Coors boycott coalition and individual activists is extensive and she makes a convincing case that “boycotts can be radical, transformative, and successful forms of political praxis” (p. 4). For readers unfamiliar with the history of boycotts and consumer activism, her case study could have been situated more broadly in the existing literature, particularly in terms of studies that have highlighted solidarity between workers and consumers. Indeed, the consumer is mostly absent from Brantley's study. Specialists may benefit from an elaboration on how the boycott interacts with other tactics that activists employ, such as the union label or other so-called buycott tactics. Though admittedly outside of the scope of her study one wonders how the two dominant breweries, Anheuser-Busch and Miller, and their unionized workers responded to and perhaps benefited from the Coors boycott. After all, boycotters likely desired a substitute for their Silver Bullets and surely a cold Bud or Miller High Life would have sufficed.