Nelson Lichtenstein
nelsonlichtenstein.bsky.social
Nelson Lichtenstein
@nelsonlichtenstein.bsky.social

Historian, sometime journalist, retired actually

Nelson Lichtenstein is an American historian. He is a professor of history at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and director of the Center for the Study of Work, Labor and Democracy. He is a labor historian who has written also about 20th-century American political economy, including the automotive industry and Wal-Mart. .. more

Political science 48%
Sociology 28%

Wait, I keep hearing Republican talking heads saying he has mandate to gut and destroy everything 🙄🤬
This is a very important point. Please let everyone know.
Yes!

I think @nelsonlichtenstein.bsky.social's book does a great job of showing why that was. I like how he notes that, after the fall of the Wall, lots of otherwise reasonable people decided capitalism must be the best because it beat the Soviets.
Important indeed as it comes back to Biden, Harris defeat. Supporting @noamscheiber.bsky.social case against Obama's reliance on Clinton advisers is @nelsonlichtenstein.bsky.social on Clinton, the "Fabulous Failure." btw, purchase his book here, not Amazon: www.simonandschuster.biz/books/The-Es...
The New Republic is hiring a Class Politics reporter
Class Politics Reporter
We are looking for an experienced journalist to cover class in America as a full-time staff writer for The New Republic. The ideal candidate is open-minded, intellectually curious, and comfortable int...
tnr.bamboohr.com
Guess the year
Hint: it’s Harvey O’Connor
What shaped Mike Davis’s fierce critique of American capitalism? In a powerful tribute, Nelson Lichtenstein @nelsonlichtenstein.bsky.social maps Davis’s journey from New Left Review to City of Quartz and beyond.

Read in LABOR: doi.org/10.1215/1547...

If you are interested in the fascinating and provocative career of Mike Davis you might find this retrospective on his work of interest. read.dukeupress.edu/labor/articl...
Mike Davis: The Road to City of Quartz and Beyond
Abstract. This essay explores the historiographic ideas and political experiences that influenced the work of Mike Davis, the prolific Marxist historian who died in 2022. His first two books, Prisoner...
read.dukeupress.edu

Leftists are now using the word "siblings" rather than "brothers and sisters" when addressing fellow unionists, activists, and movement people. I can see the gender logic, but siblings has little punch. How about "comrades?" That links speaker, writer, and audience in a common, fighting endeavor.

Why did corporatism take root in postwar Germany but not in the U.S.? In the first article of this special issue, @nelsonlichtenstein.bsky.social explores how both countries shared surprising similarities in the 1940s–50s—before diverging sharply in labor relations models. doi.org/10.1215/1547...

Here's an article I just published in LABOR: Studies in Working-Class History. A bit relevant to contemporary labor and left discussions over "sectoral bargaining." read.dukeupress.edu/labor/articl...
Why No Corporatism in the United States? American Versus German Models of Industrial Relations in the Early Postwar Era | Labor | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu