James Green (educator)

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James Green (November 4, 1944) is a professor of history and labor studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston. He is also a well-known author and labor activist.

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[edit] Early life and education

Green was born in 1944 to Gerald and Mary Green in Oak Park, Illinois, a small factory town outside Chicago.

In 1966, he received a bachelor's degree from Northwestern University. During his time at Northwestern, Green was deeply influenced by President John F. Kennedy's famous civil rights address on national television on June 11, 1963, the assassination of civil rights leader Medgar Evers later that same evening, and Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in August 1963. Green interned in the summer of 1965 and 1966 in the office of Senator Paul Douglas.

While working in the nation's capital, Green met Senator Eugene McCarthy, and later worked on McCarthy's 1968 presidential campaign.

From 1966 to 1968, Green was a Woodrow Wilson fellow conducting historical research in Washington, D.C.

Green entered Yale University to work on his doctorate. Green immediately became involved in a student strike. He was a member of the Student Strike Coordinating Committee which led a mass rally, teach-in and demonstration on May 1, 1970. More than 15,000 people jammed the Yale campus from Friday through Sunday to protest the arrest and trial of Black Panther leader Bobby Seale for murder.

In the fall of 1970, Green was appointed an assistant professor of history at Brandeis University.

When the magazine Radical America moved from Madison, Wisconsin, to Boston in 1971, Green began writing for the former SDS-run publication, Radical America. A 1974 Radical America article by Green and co-author Allen Hunter outlining the history of school desegregation in Boston prior to the 1974 school-busing crisis, "Racism and Busing in Boston," was widely quoted in the mainstream media.

Green received his Ph.D. from Yale in 1972. Green studied under the legendary historian C. Vann Woodward, and became acquainted with the leftist historians Eric Hobsbawm and Herbert Gutman. During this time he also was involved in the anti-war movement, which eventually sparked his interest in the history of radicalism in the United States.

Green took a position as a lecturer in history at the University of Warwick during the 1975 to 1976 term. He became involved in the History Workshop, a group of historians who focused research on workers and local movements rather than national trends, markets and large organizations. Green's subsequent work was heavily influenced by the theories of the History Workshop, and he became an active proponent of the "new labor history" movement in the U.S.

In 1977, Green left Brandeis and was appointed an associate professor of history and labor studies in the College of Public and Community Service at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. (He is now a full professor.) In December of that year and into early 1978, Green worked part-time as a journalist in West Virginia, covering a national strike by coal miners who had defied (for a few days) a Taft-Hartley Act back-to-work order by President Jimmy Carter.

In 1978, Green co-founded the Massachusetts History Workshop with Susan Reverby and Martin Blatt, two other Boston-area labor historians. The project, an exercise in "new labor history," brought workers and academics together to explore labor history and to identify common concerns and issues. The project folded in the late 1980s, and its papers are now housed at the Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College.

Green's interest in radicalism and his experiences in West Virginia led him to become involved in the American labor movement in the 1980s. In 1981, he created a labor studies major at UMass-Boston, and started teaching leadership training workshops for unions such as the United Mine Workers of America.

In 1987, in addition to continuing on the faculty at UMass-Boston, Green was named a lecturer at the Harvard Trade Union Program (now called the Labor and Worklife Program) at Harvard Law School.

Green married Janet Grogan in 1988. The couple has one son.

In 1995, Green founded the Labor Resource Center at UMass-Boston.

In 1998, Green was named a Fullbright scholar and taught at the University of Genoa in Italy.

[edit] Documentary film work

Green's interest in labor history and involvement in the American labor movement has led him to become involved with a number of documentary films.

In 1989, Green was supporting coal miners who had struck the Pittston Coal Group. Documentary film-maker Barbara Kopple, commissioned to create a centennial history of the United Mine Workers, was there filming the strike and employed Green as a consultant. The film became Out of Darkness: The Mine Workers' Story. He received an associate producer credit on the picture.

In 1992 and 1993, Green worked as a researcher and consultant on "The Great Depression," a seven-part documentary which aired by the PBS television show, "American Experience". Afterward, he served on the community advisory board of local Boston public television station, WGBH, from 1993 to 1994.

From 1995 to 1996, Green served as a consultant to the film The Fight in the Fields: Cesar Chavez and the Farm Workers. The film later aired on PBS.

[edit] Research

Green's research focuses on radical political and social movements in the U.S. (including new social movements), as well as the history of labor unions in the United States. Green writes from a leftist theoretical standpoint.

One of Green's earliest published works, The World of the Worker, is noted for its revisionist take on American labor history. The work came about after historian Eric Foner challenged Green to write the history of the American labor movement from a "new labor history" perspective.

Green's 2000 book, Taking History to Heart, had a deep impact in the academic history community. The book is a semi-autobiographical account of the role historical awareness plays in forging powerful, effective social movements. Writing in a colloquial style, Green discussed how important historical events such as the Haymarket riot, the Bread and Roses strike, and the civil rights movement influenced his own life. He vividly describes these events, and ended up not only writing terrific historical narratives but showed how those stories encouraged his own participation in various causes. In many ways, the book is a written example of Green's lifelong struggle to take history out of the ivory tower and make it come alive and be relevant to working people and community activists. The book received praise from academics for encouraging the reconnection of academia to society.

In 206, Green published Death in the Haymarket, a popularized history of the Haymarket riot. Although not noted for its path-breaking research, the book was a best-seller.

[edit] Memberships and awards

[edit] Awards

Green has been the recipient of a numbers of awards and honors. He was a Woodrow Wilson Foundation fellow in 1966, and he received a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities in 1977 to deliver a series of public lectures on Boston-area labor unions.

In 1977, Green's article, "Tenant Farmer Discontent and Socialist Protest in Texas," won Southwestern Historical Quarterly magazine's H. Bailey Carroll Award for the best article published by the journal during the preceding year.

In 1983, Green's introduction to the reprint edition of Oscar Ameringer's autobiography, If You Don't Weaken, received the Bryant Spann Memorial Prize from the Eugene V. Debs Foundation as the best scholarly work of the year concerning social reform or radical activism.


[edit] Memberships and professional positions

From 1971 until the magazine's demise in 1999, Green was part of the editorial collective which oversaw the journal Radical America, and he was a frequent contributor to the publication.

Green is a member of the Labor and Working Class History Association (LAWCHA). He was a vice president of LAWCHA from 2001 to 2003 and its president from 2003 to 2005.

From 2001 to 2002, Green was an associate editor at Labor History. In February 2004, Green led a revolt by the entire editorial board of the journal Labor History (journal). The editorial board as well as much of the staff left that publication after a disagreement with publisher Taylor and Francis over the direction of the journal. According to Leon Fink, the former editor of Labor History, the principal issue was maintaining the journal's editorial independence.[1] Green negotiated an agreement which led to the founding of Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas, which is co-published by LAWCHA and Duke University Press. Green serves as an associate editor of the new journal.

Green is also president of The Welcome Project for Immigrants and Refugees, an organization which helps immigrants in Boston acclimate to life in the U.S.

[edit] Published works

[edit] Solely authored books

  • Death in the Haymarket: A Story of Chicago, the First Labor Movement and the Bombing That Divided Gilded Age America. New York: Pantheon Books, 2006. ISBN 0375422374
  • Grass-Roots Socialism: Radical Movements in the Southwest, 1895-1943. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1978. ISBN 0807107735
  • Taking History to Heart: The Power of the Past in Building Social Movements. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2000. ISBN 1558492410
  • The World of the Worker: Labor in Twentieth Century America. Paperback reprint ed. Champaign, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1998. ISBN 0252067347 (first published in 1980)

[edit] Co-authored books

  • Green, James and Donahue, Hugh C. Boston's Workers: A Labor History. Boston: Boston Public Library, 1979. ISBN 0890730563
  • Juravich, Tom; Green, James; and Hartford, William. Commonwealth of Toil: Chapters from the History of Massachusetts Workers and Their Unions. Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press, 1996. ISBN 1558490450

[edit] Solely edited books

  • Workers' Struggles, Past and Present: A 'Radical America' Reader. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1983. ISBN: 0877222932

[edit] Solely authored articles

  • "The Brotherhood of Timber Workers, 1910-1913: A Radical Response to Industrial Capitalism in the Southern U.S.A." Past and Present. No. 60 (August 1973).
  • "Crime Against Memory at Ludlow." Labor: Studies in Working Class History of the Americas. 1:1 (Spring 2004).
  • "Democracy Comes to Little Siberia: Steel Worker Organizing in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, 1933-1937." Labor's Heritage. 5:3 (August 1993).
  • "Holding the Line: Miners' Militancy and the 1977-78 Coal Strike." Radical America. 12:4 (July/August 1978).
  • "Tenant Farmer Discontent and Socialist Protest in Texas." Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 81:2 (October 1977).
  • "Workers, Unions, and the Politics of Public History." The Public Historian. 11:2 (1989).

[edit] Co-authored articles

  • Green, James and Hunter, Allen. "Racism and Busing in Boston." Radical America. 8:6 (November/December 1974).

[edit] Solely authored book chapters

  • "Introduction." In "If You Don't Weaken: The Autobiography of Oscar Ameringer," by Oscar Ameringer. Reprint edition. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1983. ISBN 080611861X
  • "Tying the Knot of Solidarity: The Pittston Strike of 1989-1990." In United Mine Workers of America: A Model of Industrial Solidarity? John H.M. Laslett, ed. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996. ISBN 0271015373

[edit] Co-authored book chapters

  • Green, James and Bollen, Jim. "The Long Strike: The Practice of Solidarity Among Boston Packinghouse Workers, 1954-55." In Labor in Massachusetts 1788-1988, Selected Essays. Martin Kaufman and Kenneth Fones-Wolf, eds. Westfield, Mass.: Institute for Massachusetts Studies, 1990.

[edit] References

[edit] External links