Explores the boundaries of this paternalistic order by investigating workers' strategies of conformity and resistance and by tracing the disciplinary practices of managers during the period from the turn of the century to a massive reorganisation of the mills in the late 1950s.
"This compelling study represents a major advance, indeed the maturation of the 'new social history of national capitalism.' Farnsworth-Alvear provides a deft accounting of complex exchanges, dialogues, and social negotiations in a changing crucible of class and gender relations."--Michael F. Jimenez, University of Pittsburgh