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Labor Pains: Inside America's New Union Movement [School & Library Binding]

Suzan Erem (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Hardcover $48.00  
School & Library Binding, October 2001 --  
Paperback $17.95  

Book Description

October 2001 0613922050 978-0613922050

Labor Pains is an insider's account of the struggle to rebuild a vibrant and powerful trade union movement in the United States. It takes as its starting point the daily experience of a union organizer, and brings that experience to life. It enables us to grasp how the conflicting demands of race, class, and gender are lived in the new union movement.

The role of the unions is defined mainly by larger economic and political agendas. While keeping these agendas clearly in sight, Erem focuses primarily on aspects of the life of the union which often remain hidden. The personal crises of union members become entangled in the work of the union. The energies of the union are focused not only on winning gains from bosses but also on maintaining internal cohesion and morale among workers. Barriers of race, age and gender are constantly negotiated and overcome, and conflicts flare up across them at moments of tension. And union life goes on not only when the workers have made their point, or won a victory, but after defeat as well. The personalities and ambitions of union organizers converge at times and become a source of tension at others. Each individual within the larger collective has their own task of finding a viable balance between public and private selves.

These intersecting lines of force are imaginatively recreated in this book. Erem writes as a woman in a union movement which is dominated by men; as the child of immigrants in a movement whose members are increasingly immigrants themselves; as one who finds herself in the racial no man's land between black and white. While never underestimating the obstacles in the way of the union movement, she makes a powerful and passionate case for organizing the disorganized and empowering the powerless.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

ADVANCE PRAISE FOR LABOR PAINS BY SUZAN EREM

"I love it! It's about time somebody wrote about union organizing as the adventure it truly is! I hope this is the beginning of a whole new era in labor writing, which has historically been all too dry. Labor Pains is a great read." --BARBARA EHRENREICH

"As a new generation of campus activists move into the labor movement, Labor Pains captures the complex hard love that working within today's labor movement entails. Through Suzan Erem's very readable stories we get a sometimes troubling, sometimes heartening, and mostly very real sense of the day to day struggles of a union trying to do right by its members and its vision, in an ever more challenging environment for workers and unions. It is a very personal story, framed by Erem's unique background and experience, but still tells a universal story about sticking with the union, even when the going gets rough." --KATE BRONFENBRENNER, DIRECTOR, NYS SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL AND LABOR RELATIONS, CORNELL UNIVERSITY

"Reading Suzan Erem is like listening to a longtime friend. She writes with the authentic voice of a sister who's been there, done that, printed the t-shirts, and personally hand painted the picket signs. Labor Pains is an elevated train ride through the lives of real people lovingly rendered without sentimentality or fawning nostalgia." --ELISE A. BRYANT, GEORGE MEANY CENTER

"This is the painful story of a person who loves the labor movement; a straight from the shoulder, honest recounting of the persons she met and the joys and disappointments which were hers through the years of organizing. Suzan Erem's questioning of leadership tactics was the outcome of her deep respect for the people she organized. A series of honest encounters are told in a most readable fashion." --MSGR. JOHN J. EGAN, DE PAUL UNIVERSITY

"Suzan Erem's chronicle of one mother's life and work in organized labor is touching, honest, daring, sometimes uncomfortable, but also instructive and uplifting. For anyone who has ever had to put aside family and personal goals for the betterment of others, this is your story. Keep writing, Suzan; stories like yours are as necessary as water to a land thirsty for genuine heroes, genuine conflicts, and standing tall for genuine solutions." --LUIS J. RODRIGUEZ, AUTHOR, ALWAYS RUNNING: LA VIDA LOCA, GANG DAYS IN LA --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

Suzan Erem has worked in the union movement as an organizer, union rep, communications director, and elected officer, mainly in Chicago. She is the author of Labor Pains: Inside America's New Union Movement (Monthly Review Press). She is now a freelance writer.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • School & Library Binding
  • Publisher: San Val (October 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0613922050
  • ISBN-13: 978-0613922050
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #11,121,465 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Real Labor Activists Tell it Like It Is, October 6, 2003
Ever since John Sweeny displaced the old guard at the AFL-CI0 and began to revive a moribund but important labor movement, we've read a great deal about this new face of labor. We've read about the focus on service employees -- who are predominantly women and people of color -- we've learned about aggressive organizing tactics and corporate campaigns, we've seen the leaders of the movement featured in labor publications and we've even heard about the members, activists and staffers who are the ground troops in this war.

Suzan Erem's book, Labor Pains, is unusual in that it makes us live through the beginnings of that movement. We don't just read about it; Erem's writing has the ability to bring you into it and you see if from the inside -- warts and all.

She does this by conncecting with reader not as an activist or leader -- but as a human being. The labor movement is made up of human beings who have the same problems and concerns that everyone else has, including raising children, paying the rent and even keeping warm during the long Chicago winter. It has been a shortcoming of writing about labor that the authors seem to think that the only humans are the "objects" of the organizing drives, the potential and actual bargaining unit employees, except, of course, when they have something bad to say about the leaders.

Erem doesn't have something bad to say -- or something good, for that matter. She just tells it as it is. Yes, the movement is made up of men and women struggling to create a better world, but these men and women can -- like everyone else -- be motivated by racism or nationalism, sexism and careerism. Not to say that is to patronize the reader and to call into question all of the "happy" truths of the movement. Those interested in the new labor movement can balance the truth about our humanity with the fact of our commitment.

I especially recommend this book to those many young people who come to the movement with high hopes of making a difference. It says that you have good reason for those hopes, but here are some landmines to avoid. These readers will all thank Erem for sharing the shortcomings of our activists and our movement -- including her own --with them, while also confirming that their hope to make a difference by organizing working people into unions is still well placed.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Often Poetic Picture of the Gritty Side of Labor Organizing, February 17, 2002
By 
Arthur Small (Iowa City, IA USA) - See all my reviews
Often Poetic Picture of the Gritty Side of Labor Organizing

Labor Pains is a good read and a thoughtful and perceptive description of the work of a labor organizer for SEIU Local 73. The author, Suzan Erem, is a woman with the soul of a poet who fought on behalf of workers to organize. Much that I had read previously about such efforts to establish and maintain unions has been either inspirational, like the splendid song of the French Revolution, the Marseillaise, or tedious, like descriptions of Madam Lafarge's knitting. This is neither: it is the well-observed descriptive account of activities of a dedicated witness to, and participant in, the efforts by the labor movement to secure power and justice. In some senses it is about love and perhaps even the ecstasy of the moment but more important it is as the title, Labor Pains, perceptively suggests, about what comes after the love and the moment and before the exhilarating and painful moment of birth.

Labor Pains is about Suzan Erem's moments of discomfort and doubt. It is also about her persistence and her effort to maintain balance and idealism. She does not always succeed and tells us about the failure of her marriage and the organizing efforts that didn't work. But she also provides graphic descriptions of efforts that did work and the pleasure she took in those moments.

Erem is particularly good at describing the people she worked with and the role of the media in the struggle to organize. Her primary job was not only to organize, but also to get the story out. The story is not always happy or glamorous but it is well described. In one scene a small band of organizers hang a banner over an overpass to draw the media's attention to a strike they are organizing against a Chicago hospital. It is a very cold early winter Chicago morning on Lake Shore Drive and the effort seems almost futile, perhaps crazy. But it works and the media event draws attention to the union's struggle and helps in the winning effort organize the hospital and bring about an improved wage scale and other benefits through the protection of the union.

Erem describes her work in the labor movement both as an attempt to "scratch our mark on history" and to tell the story of the workers, a story that might otherwise not be told. She has done this well in Labor Pains and she has also told us her own story. It was a story worth telling. I expect she will have more stories to tell us.

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