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ISBN: PB: 9780226044194

ISBN: HB: 9780226038865

University of Chicago Press

July 2013

360 pp.

23x15 cm

30 halftones

PB:
£26,00
QTY:
HB:
£78,00
QTY:

Categories:

Meet Joe Copper

Masculinity and Race on Montana's World War II Home Front

"I realize that I am a soldier of production whose duties are as important in this war as those of the man behind the gun". So began the pledge that many home front men took at the outset of World War II when they went to work in the factories, fields, and mines while their compatriots fought in the battlefields of Europe and on the bloody beaches of the Pacific. The male experience of working and living in wartime America is rarely examined, but the story of men like these provides a crucial counter-narrative to the national story of Rosie the Riveter and GI Joe that dominates scholarly and popular discussions of World War II. In "Meet Joe Copper", Matthew L. Basso describes the formation of a powerful, white, working-class masculine ideology in the decades prior to the war, and shows how it thrived – on the job, in the community, and through union politics. Basso recalls for us the practices and beliefs of the first- and second-generation immigrant copper workers of Montana while advancing the historical conversation on gender, class, and the formation of a white ethnic racial identity".Meet Joe Copper" provides a context for our ideas of postwar masculinity and whiteness and finally returns the men of the home front to our reckoning of the Greatest Generation and the New Deal era.

About the Author

Matthew L. Basso is assistant professor of history and gender studies at the University of Utah. He is editor of "Men at Work: Rediscovering Depression-Era Stories from the Federal Writers' Project" and co-editor of "Across the Great Divide: Cultures of Manhood in the American West".

Reviews

"Matthew L. Basso's evidence and interpretations regarding the significance of masculinity to the values, actions, and concerns of working-class civilian men in Montana's copper industry substantially revise our understandings of the middle decades of the twentieth century" – Karen Anderson, author of Wartime Women