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Dorothy Sue Cobble

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Dorothy Sue Cobble httpswwwoahsecureorgimgdlplecturerscobble

Books
  
Feminism Unfinished: A Short - S, The other women's movement, Dishing it out, Other Women's Movemen

Oah 2008 dorothy sue cobble


Dorothy Sue Cobble (June 28, 1949) is an American historian, and a specialist in the historical study of work, social movements, and feminism in the United States and globally. She is a Distinguished Professor at Rutgers University, holding dual appointments in the Departments of Labor Studies and History since 1986.

Contents

2010 sol stetin award for labor history dorothy sue cobble


Career

Cobble grew up in the South, before receiving her B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1972. She worked briefly as a trade union stevedore in the mid-1970s before earning her Ph.D. in history from Stanford University in 1986. A student of Carl Degler, she became a leading historian of women's labor movements.

Cobble's first book Dishing It Out: Waitresses and Their Unions in the Twentieth Century (1991) was among the earliest studies of unionism and the service sector. Her second book, The Other Women's Movement: Workplace Justice and Social Rights in America (2005) is a political and intellectual history of women’s contributions to reforming the workplace. It received the 2005 Philip Taft Book Prize from Cornell University for the best book in American labor history. She also wrote The Sex of Class: Women Transforming American Labor (2007), published by the Cornell University Press. Most recently she coauthored, with Linda Gordon and Astrid Henry, Feminism Unfinished: A Short, Surprising History of American Women’s Movements (2014).

References

Dorothy Sue Cobble Wikipedia