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摘要

世界产业工人联合会(IWW)也许是美国历史上最重要的激进工会,它继续吸引着美国国内外的工人。世界产盟于1905年在芝加哥成立,当时芝加哥是美国最大的工业城市,而美国已成为世界上最强大的经济体。由于工业资本主义的性质,已经成为一个全球性的经济,IWW和它的理想迅速成为一个世界性的现象。“盟员”的成员过去和现在都被亲切地称为“盟员”,在人数上从未像主流工会那样庞大,但他们的影响,尤其是从1905年到20世纪20年代,是巨大的。IWW以其激烈的言辞、大胆的策略和对革命产业工会主义的承诺俘获了无数反叛工人的想象力。IWW承诺要取代更大、更主流的美国劳工联合会(AFL)的“面包和黄油”工艺工会,用强大到足以与更大的公司抗衡的大规模产业工会,并最终推翻资本主义,取而代之的是一个以人为本而不是以利润为基础的社会。在美国,在第一次世界大战之前和期间,工会通过组织被其他工会忽视的工人——东北部和中西部的移民工厂工人,大平原的移民农场工人,以及西部的采矿、伐木和收割工人,在人数和声誉上都有所增长。与那个时代的大多数其他工会不同,IWW欢迎移民、妇女和有色人种;事实上,大多数美国机构都排斥非裔美国人、深色皮肤的移民以及女性,这使得IWW成为美国乃至世界上最具包容性的机构之一。摇摆不定的思想、成员和出版物很快就传播到美国以外的地方——首先是墨西哥和加拿大,然后是加勒比海和拉丁美洲,接着是欧洲、非洲南部和大洋洲。在不到十年的时间里,世界产盟及其理想在世界范围内的扩张证明了其成员的热情承诺。它也说明了反资本主义倾向的巨大流行,这种倾向与无政府主义比社会民主主义有更多的共同点。然而,IWW的革命纲领和阶级战争的言论带来的敌人多于盟友,包括政府,这在第一次世界大战期间和之后被证明是毁灭性的,尽管工会坚持了下来。即使在2020年,IWW所支持的理想仍然在世界范围内一个人数不多但不断增长且充满活力的工人群体中产生共鸣。
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Industrial Workers of the World
Perhaps the most important radical labor union in U.S. history, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) continues to attract workers, in and beyond the United States. The IWW was founded in 1905 in Chicago—at that time, the greatest industrial city in a country that had become the world’s mightiest economy. Due to the nature of industrial capitalism in what, already, had become a global economy, the IWW and its ideals quickly became a worldwide phenomenon. The Wobblies, as members were and still are affectionately known, never were as numerically large as mainstream unions, but their influence, particularly from 1905 into the 1920s, was enormous. The IWW captured the imaginations of countless rebellious workers with its fiery rhetoric, daring tactics, and commitment to revolutionary industrial unionism. The IWW pledged to replace the “bread and butter” craft unionism of the larger, more mainstream American Federation of Labor (AFL), with massive industrial unions strong enough to take on ever-larger corporations and, ultimately, overthrow capitalism to be replaced with a society based upon people rather than profit. In the United States, the union grew in numbers and reputation, before and during World War I, by organizing workers neglected by other unions—immigrant factory workers in the Northeast and Midwest, migratory farmworkers in the Great Plains, and mine, timber, and harvest workers out West. Unlike most other unions of that era, the IWW welcomed immigrants, women, and people of color; truly, most U.S. institutions excluded African Americans and darker-skinned immigrants as well as women, making the IWW among the most radically inclusive institutions in the country and world. Wobbly ideas, members, and publications soon spread beyond the United States—first to Mexico and Canada, then into the Caribbean and Latin America, and to Europe, southern Africa, and Australasia in rapid succession. The expansion of the IWW and its ideals across the world in under a decade is a testament to the passionate commitment of its members. It also speaks to the immense popularity of anticapitalist tendencies that shared more in common with anarchism than social democracy. However, the IWW’s revolutionary program and class-war rhetoric yielded more enemies than allies, including governments, which proved devastating during and after World War I, though the union soldiered on. Even in 2020, the ideals the IWW espoused continued to resonate among a small but growing and vibrant group of workers, worldwide.
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