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Loading... Kids On Strike!by Susan Campbell Bartoletti
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This book was so interesting. I read it as I prepared to direct the musical Newsies. It could also be a valuable source for the musicals Carousel and Ragtime as well. It was very readable and had many beautiful pictures. I do wish there were more intext citations so we knew exactly where things came from. ( ) This book was actually really hard for me to read. It is a very long book and it was a lot to read in a week! There was so much information and some chapters weren’t as interesting as others. I also didn’t even have any general information about the strikes that went on in different parts of the US in the late 1800s and early 1900s. This novel was about children working in inhuman working conditions and extremely long working days. Over time they began to make demands for better conditions, pay and safe environments to work in. It is about children sticking up for their rights and demanding better working conditions to keep themselves safe and out of harms way. It is based on true stories and each chapter reveals different situations and areas of the US where children were being mistreated and forced into the workforce at such young ages. There was over 2 million children forced into the workforce and most of them fought for better treatment. Some got them, some didn’t but they helped build the laws against child labor and mistreatment and helped it become what it is today. "Kids on Strike" informs the reader about labor strikes led by young people. In the early 1900s, almost 2 million children were employed in the United States, many forced to work under inhumane conditions. Finally, after years of mistreatment, children started to come together to demand better wages, safer working environments and fairer housing prices. Susan Bartoletti tells the stories of young workers in coal mines, garment industries and cotton mills. Although, quite a few federal child labor laws have been passed to protect children, children are still exploited all over the world. Bartoletti shows the reader that even though conditions have improved, it is imperative that we keep fighting against child labor.
Sherry York (VOYA, February 2000 (Vol. 22, No. 6)) Have children always been victims in the workplace? Did they ever fight back? What role did they play in organized labor? These questions are answered as the author adroitly evokes the social milieu in which strikes involving children occurred in Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania from 1836 through 1910. Numerous black-and-white archival photographs effectively illustrate the descriptions of people and events in this lively history. As social commentary and a vivid portrayal of historical events, this book achieves an ideal balance between factual reporting and proselytizing. Readers are able to assimilate data and form their own opinions. A time line of federal child labor laws begins in 1916 when the first laws were passed, continues through the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act, and ends with a present-day statistic about the exploitation of children under age fourteen in industrialized and developing nations around the world. The bibliography includes general sources and chapter-by-chapter documentation. Bartoletti's unique scope creates a valuable resource for students researching labor movements or the role of children in American history or both. It can also provide supplemental reading for students in child development, history and the family, and economics classes. Bartoletti's background as a teacher is apparent; this nonfiction book invites reading for pleasure as well as information. Index. Illus. Photos. Biblio. Source Notes. Chronology. VOYA CODES: 4Q 3P M J S (Better than most, marred only by occasional lapses; Will appeal with pushing; Elizabeth Bush (The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, December 1999 (Vol. 53, No. 4)) Although much has been written about child labor past and present, Bartoletti focuses here on children’s participation in organized labor actions. Eight substantial chapters cover various industries (from spinning to mining to shoe shining), and differing outcomes (from failed strikes to landmark gains) in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Readers can observe a broad spectrum of children’s experiences--New York bootblacks who organized for relief from uniform rental fees; “newsies” whose business acumen (and outright cheating and deceit) kept their families afloat; young mine workers who testified at federally mandated arbitration hearings; children sent to foster homes (for safety and publicity) during the violent Lawrence, Massachusetts mill strike. Coverage does fall short in several key areas, though. Child farm labor is virtually ignored, black child laborers receive cursory attention, larger national issues of Socialism, anarchism, immigration, (and even the problem of defining the age of adulthood) are weakly addressed. Still, Bartoletti’s text and the bounty of period photographs are engaging enough to whet readers’ appetite for more, and extensive chapter-by-chapter bibliographies can lead serious upper-grade researchers onto more specific materials. An index and timetable of federal child labor laws are included. AwardsNotable Lists
Describes the conditions and treatment that drove workers, including many children, to various strikes, from the mill workers strikes in 1828 and 1836 and the coal strikes at the turn of the century to the work of Mother Jones on behalf of child workers. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)331.892Social sciences Economics Labor economics Labor unions, labor-management bargaining and disputes Labour-management bargaining and disputes StrikesLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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