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Book Review
Bridgeport's
Socialist New Deal, 1915-36. By Cecelia Bucki. (Urbana: University of Illinois
Press, 2001. xiv, 289 pp. $35.00, ISBN 0-252-02687-X.)
| Astutely
argued and copiously documented with archival, newspaper, and oral history
sources, this exploration of the coming to power and early years of a
socialist administration in Bridgeport, Connecticut, offers an outstanding
example of the strength of wedding social and political history on a local
level. In six carefully crafted chapters, Cecelia Bucki describes the
early-twentieth-century economy of Bridgeport, its Democratic and Republican
manufacturing elite, and the mechanisms they used to control the community's
purse strings. She delves into the disruptive impact of World War I and the
diverse ethnic communities that made up the city's working class and their
evolving political loyalties, and she explores the importance of the 1928 Al
Smith campaign in shifting ethnic and working-class voter loyalties to the
Socialist party. Bucki documents the reemergence of labor activism,
particularly in the metal trades, the building trades, and the garment
industry in the late 1920s and early depression years--in protests over
unemployed relief, use of nonunion contractors, and sweatshops. Her meticulous
examination of the politics of taxes, budgets, and city services is stunning;
it suggests the value of focusing on fiscal politics fully to understand
working-class political struggles in the 1920s and 1930s. |
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