Comrade Yetta


Book Description

This is the story of Yetta, a Jewish girl born somewhere in Eastern Europe and living with her father in New York's East side where her father had set up a bookstore. Her father died when Yetta was 15, barely ready to face the chaos and clamor of New York, and this beautifully written story follows her fortunes thereafter.




Comrade Yetta


Book Description




Investigation of Communist Propaganda


Book Description




Troublemakers


Book Description

William Scott’s Troublemakers explores how a major change in the nature and forms of working-class power affected novels about U.S. industrial workers in the first half of the twentieth century. With the rise of mechanization and assembly-line labor from the 1890s to the 1930s, these laborers found that they had been transformed into a class of “mass” workers who, since that time, have been seen alternately as powerless, degraded victims or heroic, empowered icons who could rise above their oppression only through the help of representative organizations located outside the workplace. Analyzing portrayals of workers in such novels as Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, Ruth McKenney's Industrial Valley, and Jack London’s The Iron Heel, William Scott moves beyond narrow depictions of these laborers to show their ability to resist exploitation through their direct actions—sit-down strikes, sabotage, and other spontaneous acts of rank-and-file “troublemaking” on the job—often carried out independently of union leadership. The novel of the mass industrial worker invites us to rethink our understanding of modern forms of representation through its attempts to imagine and depict workers’ agency in an environment where it appears to be completely suppressed.




The Inside of the Cup


Book Description




The Churchman


Book Description







The Conservator


Book Description




The Overland Monthly


Book Description