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Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2010

William H. Sewell Jr.
Affiliation:
Institute for Advanced Study

Abstract

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Type
Papers Presented at the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the Economic History Association
Copyright
Copyright © The Economic History Association 1977

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References

1 Thompson, E. P., The Making of the English Working Class (London, 1963)Google Scholar; Hobsbawn, E. J., Labouring Men: Studies in the History of Labour (London, 1964)Google Scholar; Perrot, Michelle, Les ouvriers en grève: France, 1871–1890 (Paris, 1974)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Trempé, Rolande, Les mineurs de Carmaux, 1848–1914 (Paris, 1971)Google Scholar; Shorter, Edward and Tilly, Charles, Strikes in France (London, 1974)Google Scholar; Bezucha, Robert J., The Lyon Uprising of 1834: Social and Political Conflict in the Early July Monarchy (Cambridge, Mass., 1974)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stearns, Peter N., Revolutionary Syndicalism and French Labor: A Cause Without Rebels (New Brunswick, N.J., 1971)Google Scholar and Lives of Labor: Work in Maturing Industrial Society (New York, 1975); Scott, Joan Wallach, The Glassworkers of Carmaux: French Craftsmen and Political Action in a Nineteenth-Century City (Cambridge, Mass., 1974)Google Scholar; Gutman, Herbert, Work, Culture and Society in Industrializing America: Essays in American Working-Class and Labor History (New York, 1976)Google Scholar; Montgomery, David, “The Shuttle and the Cross: Weavers and Artisans in the Kensington Riots of 1844,” Journal of Social History, 5 (Summer, 1972), 411–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and “The ‘New Unionism’ and the Transformation of Workers' Consciousness in America, 1909–1922,” Journal of Social History, 7 (Summer, 1974), 509–29. A useful collection of articles in this genre is Stearns, Peter N. and Walkowitz, Daniel J., eds., Workers in the Industrial Revolution: Recent Studies of Labor in the United States and Europe (New Brunswick, 1974).Google Scholar