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Belated Feudalism

Belated Feudalism

Belated Feudalism

Labor, the Law, and Liberal Development in the United States
Karen Orren, University of California, Los Angeles
January 1992
Available
Paperback
9780521422543
$33.00
USD
Paperback
USD
Hardback

    Contrary to the idea that the United States was liberal from its inception, Orren argues that both capitalism and constitutionalism proceeded upon a remnant of ancient feudalism. This was the common law of master and servant, embedded in the judiciary, cutting off the fundamental area of labor governance from democratic politics. The fully legislative polity that defines the modern liberal state was brought on through the industrial actions of trade unions in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and was established with the institutions of collective bargaining under the New Deal. The book represents a reinterpertation of American political development and of the role of the labor movement as a creator of liberalism, not a spoiler of socialism.

    • A challenge to the traditional view of the role of labor relations in the political development of the USA
    • Orren sees labor as the champion of liberalism rather than the defeated proponent of socialism

    Reviews & endorsements

    "The author...provides a carefully wrought and provocative argument that opposes the central tenets of American 'exceptionalism.'" Harvard Law Review

    "...a brilliant tour de force..." Staughton Lynd, The Journal of American History

    "Belated Feudalism is a provocative and highly original work of critical legal history on class formation and political development. Its underlying lesson--no labor, no liberalism--simultaneously challenges the restraining myths of America's pristine past and alerts us to the possiblities of a more democratic future." Contemporary Sociology

    "Orren provides a useful guide to the application of master-and-servant doctrine to the changing work environment and she raises challenging points about the role of labor in creating the undercarriage of the post-New Deal institutional order. These are significant contributions." Reviews in American History

    "Belated Feudalism is a stunning reinterpretation of the American political order as a whole. Labor and law are avenues to a broad vista. Orren reconceptualizes the logic of American political development, the relation of public and private in American politics, and the place of labor history in American political history. On all of these dimensions, one cannot read this book without having one's views shaken up and permanently altered." Jeffrey K. Tulis, The University of Texas at Austin

    "Orren's insight about the persistence of feudal relations in the workplace is a stunning way of accounting for the subservience that characterized employers' expectations and workers' drudgery." Wythe Holt, Labor History

    See more reviews

    Product details

    January 1992
    Paperback
    9780521422543
    252 pages
    229 × 152 × 15 mm
    0.38kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • 1. Introduction: liberalism and labor in developmental perspective
    • 2. The transition to liberalism and the remnant of American labor
    • 3. Belated feudalism: the order of the workplace in late-nineteenth-century America
    • 4. The old order and collective action
    • 5. Masters, servants, and the new American state
    • 6. Conclusion: the state of liberalism
    • Index.
      Author
    • Karen Orren , University of California, Los Angeles