Archive for the ‘Skilled workers’ tag
“Autonomous Workman”
Gregory Kealey refers to the term “Autonomous Workman” in his article “Honest Workingman.” The term is used in regards to skilled workers in the late nineteenth century. These workers had significant control over the quantity and quality of products, the method of wage payment, wages and hours, hiring, and conditions of work.
However, by the early twentieth century, scientific management came into conflict with the control of the “Autonomous Workman.”
What explains the level of class consciousness that Canada’s working people exhibited in response to industrialization from the 1880s to the 1920s?
Introduction
From the 1890s to the 1930s, Canada witnessed the transition from industrialism to the age of industry. In the age of industry, capital and labour relations became strained, as industrial expansion transformed the Canadian workplace. Skilled workers were displaced, new immigrants joined the workforce, and business and government bureaucracies became feminized. At the end of World War I, social tensions between capital and labour reached a tipping point. On May 15, 1919, 30,000 workers in Winnipeg walked off the job – the Winnipeg General Strike had begun.
Historiography
Historians have recently placed the Winnipeg General Strike within a larger context of labour unrest from 1917 to 1925. As Craig Heron notes, the statistics on strikes and union membership suggest that long-established divisions within the trade union movement were giving way to a “remarkable spirit of working-class unity and class consciousness.”
Theories
Why? Because of the stresses of World War I. Serious erosion of real wages after 1917 and the sense that the working-class had been asked to make an unfair contribution to the war effort.
The workers’ revolt was a critique of industrial capitalism in Canada.
Steven Penfold article on class and gender.
Controversies
The revolt quickly faded when prosperity collapsed in mid-1920.
Economic reasons – labour stronger when economy stronger.
Business countered with labour management, company pension and health plans.
Old divisions within working-class. Skilled workers undermined by mass unionization.
Sources and methods
American leaders of United Mine Workers of America failed to support radical leadership of Cape Breton miners.
Events and incidents
Winnipeg General Strikes
Increase in strikes and union membership
Conclusion
Consciousness of class topped racial, gender factors post World War I. However, make-up of Canadian working-class is class, race, and gender.