2022 International Labor History Association Book of the Year
A dramatic, deeply researched account of how legal repression and vigilantism brought down the Wobblies—and how the destruction of their union haunts us to this day.
In 1917, the Industrial Workers of the World was rapidly gaining strength and members. Within a decade, this radical union was effectively destroyed, the victim of the most remarkable campaign of legal repression and vigilantism in American history.
Under the Iron Heel is the first comprehensive account of this campaign.
Founded in 1905, the IWW offered to the millions of workers aggrieved by industrial capitalism the promise of a better world. But its growth, coinciding with World War I and the Russian Revolution and driven by uncompromising militancy, was seen by powerful capitalists and government officials as an existential threat that had to be eliminated. In
Under the Iron Heel, Ahmed White documents the torrent of legal persecution and extralegal, sometimes lethal violence that shattered the IWW. In so doing, he reveals the remarkable courage of those who faced this campaign, lays bare the origins of the profoundly unequal and conflicted nation we know today, and uncovers disturbing truths about the law, political repression, and the limits of free speech and association in class society.
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Contents
Introduction
Face to Face with Tragedy
1. Socialism with Its Working Clothes On
Industrial Capitalism, Radical Unionism, and the Roots of Repression
2. Protecting the Business People
Class, Law, and the Criminalization of Radical Industrial Unionism
3. In the War of Capital against Labor Someone Must Suffer
The War and the IWW
4. I’ll Take neither Mercy nor Pity
Repression and the IWW during the Red Scare
5. Dealing the Death Blow
Repression and the IWW after the Red Scare
6. Between the Drowning and the Broken
Punishment, Law, and the Legacies of Repression
Conclusion
A Vision We Don’t Possess
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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Ahmed White teaches labor and criminal law at the University of Colorado Boulder and is author of The Last Great Strike: Little Steel, the CIO, and the Struggle for Labor Rights in New Deal America.