1.Introduction
2.Portland: Middle-Class Paradise or City of Struggle?
3.Policing Everyday Life: Federal Power, Local Elites, and Citizen
Spies
4.Policing the Shipyards: The EFC and the Federal Struggle for
Urban Industrial Order
5.Wartime Class Struggle: The Portland Labor Movement and the
Industrial Peace Regime
6.Internment and Urban Moral Order: Enemy Aliens and 'Silk
Stocking Girls'
7.Postwar Clash: The Portland Soviet and the Localized Struggle
Over the Emergence of Communism
8.Epilogue
Adam J. Hodges is Associate Professor of History at the University of Houston—Clear Lake, USA. He earned a B.Sc. at the London School of Economics and a Ph.D. at the University of Illinois at Urbana—Champaign. He has published peer-reviewed articles on labor history and urban class politics during the Progressive Era.
“This relatively short, lively book should appeal to a good-sized readership. First, it will work well in advanced undergraduate and graduate classes. And general readers seeking information about our unaccountable surveillance state, police repression, and the excessive power of business will profit from learning about the deep roots of these problems and the ways ordinary people have fought back.” (Chad Pearson, The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, Vol. 16 (4), October, 2017)“This account by Hodges (history, Univ. of Houston-Clear Lake), tightly centered on Portland, OR (1917–19), is most welcome, particularly because, as he notes, the overwhelmingly ‘national focus of the historical literature’ has ‘obscured the innovative ways’ state and local governments instigated and implemented severe repression of (massive but entirely peaceful) WW I dissent. … Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.” (R. J. Goldstein, Choice, Vol. 54 (2), October, 2016)
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |