Divisions of Labor: Globality, Ideology, and War in the Shaping of the Japanese Labor Movement (August, 2005)
Lonny E. Carlile
Divisions of Labor positions the ideological and organizational evolution of the Japanese labor movement within the larger historical currents that shaped and organized labor globally in the twentieth century. Interspersing detailed narratives of Japanese labor history with analyses of parallel developments in Western European and international labor movements, Lonny Carlile shows how world views and labor movement strategies were shared across national boundaries and shaped in similar ways in the industrialized West and East. Beyond this, he highlights how in both Western Europe and Japan issues that had divided labor since the 1920s were central to the Cold War, which kept labor movements at odds with themselves internally in systematically similar ways. His book suggests that, to the extent that the historical courses of labor movements diverged, this was as much a product of differences in geopolitical location as any inherent cultural or nationally specific ideological tendency. [from dust jacket]
Honolulu, Hawaii: University of Hawaii Press. 292 pages.
ISBN: 824824563
Call number: HD8726 .C37 2005