The IWW: A Revolutionary Counterculture
PART ONE:
Introduction: The Revolutionary Enterprise
CHAPTER 1: THE IWW AND THE SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY
CHAPTER 2: THE PHILOSOPHY OF A COUNTERCULTURE
CHAPTER 3: THE IWW AND THE SOCIALIST PARTY
PART ONE NOTES
PART TWO:
CHAPTER 4: TOWARDS A WORKING-CLASS CULTURE
PART TWO NOTES
Introduction: The Revolutionary Enterprise
CHAPTER 1: THE IWW AND THE SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY
- The Founding Convention Debates Political Action
- De Leon Defines His Position
- The IWW Repudiates Political Action
- American Exceptionalism and the Significance of 1908
CHAPTER 2: THE PHILOSOPHY OF A COUNTERCULTURE
- IWW Philosophy: The State and Political Action
- IWW Philosophy: Ethics, Direct Action, and Sabotage
- The IWW on Violence
- The Problems of the Counterculture
CHAPTER 3: THE IWW AND THE SOCIALIST PARTY
- The Socialist Critique of the IWW
- The Counterculture Responds
- The Argument from Expediency
- The Proscription of the Wobblies
- The Socialist Party Rejects Mass Activism
PART ONE NOTES
PART TWO:
CHAPTER 4: TOWARDS A WORKING-CLASS CULTURE
- Towards a Raceless Society
- The IWW's Vision of a Genderless World
- The IWW on Patriotism and Religion
- The IWW and the New Proletariat
- A New Social Formation
- Revolutionary Literature and Art
- The IWW and the War
- The Repression of the IWW
PART TWO NOTES