Labor Day and the American Working Class

D. Haverty-Stacke
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Abstract

The first Labor Day parade was held on September 5, 1882, in New York City. It, and the annual holiday demonstrations that followed in that decade and the next, resulted from the growth of the modern organized labor movement that took place in the context of the second industrial revolution. These first Labor Day celebrations also became part of the then ongoing ideological and tactical divisions within that movement. By the early 1900s, workers’ desire to enjoy the fruits of their labor by participating in popular leisure pursuits came to characterize the day. But union leaders, who considered such leisure pursuits a distraction from displays of union solidarity, continued to encourage the organization of parades. With the protections afforded to organized labor by the New Deal, and with the gains made during and after World War II (particularly among unionized white, male, industrial laborers), Labor Day parades declined further after 1945 as workers enjoyed access to mass cultural pursuits, increasingly in suburban settings. This decline was indicative of a broader loss of union movement culture that had served to build solidarity within unions, display working-class militancy to employers, and communicate the legitimacy of organized labor to the American public. From time to time since the late 1970s unions have attempted to reclaim the power of Labor Day to make concerted demands through their display of workers’ united power; but, for most Americans the holiday has become part of a three-day weekend devoted to shopping or leisure that marks the end of the summer season.
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劳动节和美国工人阶级
第一次劳动节游行于1882年9月5日在纽约市举行。在第二次工业革命的背景下,现代有组织的劳工运动迅速发展,导致了这次罢工,以及随后在那个十年和下一个十年中每年举行的假日示威活动。这些第一次劳动节庆祝活动也成为当时运动中持续的意识形态和策略分歧的一部分。到了20世纪初,工人们希望通过参与流行的休闲活动来享受劳动成果的愿望成为了这一天的特征。但工会领导人认为这种休闲活动分散了工会团结的注意力,继续鼓励组织游行。随着新政对有组织劳工的保护,以及二战期间和战后的进步(特别是在工会化的白人男性工业工人中),1945年之后,劳动节游行进一步减少,因为工人们越来越多地在郊区的环境中享受到大众文化的追求。这种下降表明工会运动文化的广泛丧失,这种文化曾在工会内部建立团结,向雇主展示工人阶级的战斗力,并向美国公众传达有组织的劳工的合法性。自20世纪70年代末以来,工会不时试图通过展示工人的团结力量来收回劳动节的权力,提出一致的要求;但是,对于大多数美国人来说,这个节日已经成为一个为期三天的周末的一部分,用来购物或休闲,标志着夏季的结束。
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