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  • The Popular Wobbly: Selected Writings of T-Bone Slim

    The Popular Wobbly by Slim, T-Bone; Clayton, Owen; McIntyre, Iain;

    Selected Writings of T-Bone Slim

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó Univ Of Minnesota Press
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2025. június 24.
    • Kötetek száma Paperback

    • ISBN 9781517914967
    • Kötéstípus Puhakötés
    • Terjedelem360 oldal
    • Méret 229x152x18 mm
    • Súly 454 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • Illusztrációk 20 black and white illustrations
    • 700

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    Hosszú leírás:

    The first critical edition of the writings of the prolific radical workers’ newspaper columnist and musician who rode the rails during the Great Depression

    The Popular Wobbly brings together a wide selection of writings by T-Bone Slim, the most popular and talented writer belonging to the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). Slim wrote humorous, polemical pieces, engaging with topics like labor and class injustice, which were mostly published in IWW publications from 1920 until his death in 1942. Although relatively little is known about Slim, editors Owen Clayton and Iain McIntyre coalesce the latest research on this enigmatic character to create a vivid portrait that adds valuable context for the array of writings assembled here.

    Known as “the laureate of the logging camps,” Slim also composed numerous songs that have been performed and recorded by Pete Seeger, Utah Phillips, and Candie Carawan, who in 1960 updated Slim’s song “The Popular Wobbly” with Civil Rights–era lyrics. Slim’s witticisms, sayings, and exhortations (“Wherever you find injustice, the proper form of politeness is attack”; “Only the poor break laws—the rich evade them”) were widely discussed among fellow hobos across the “jungle” campfires that dotted the railways, and some even transcribed his commentary on boxcars that traveled the country. Yet despite Slim’s importance and fame during his lifetime, his work disappeared from public view almost immediately after his death.

    The Popular Wobbly is the first critical edition of Slim’s work and also a significant contribution to literature about working-class writers, the radical labor movement, and the history and culture of nomadism and precarity. With this publication, Slim’s rediscovered writings can once again inspire artists and activists to march and agitate for a more just and equitable world.



    "With switchblade wit, the great IWW provocateur T-Bone Slim skewered injustice and uplifted the working class."—Tom Morello

    "T-Bone Slim was a really impressive person who should be much better known. This anthology shows that his words and ideas are still relevant today."—Noam Chomsky

    "This is lost wisdom."—Billy Bragg

    "[These writings have] the force of Hemingway plus the sting of Swift."—Lee Taylor

    "It remains impossible to reproduce T-Bone Slim’s matchless wordplay and invention of language. . . . We believe his madcap humor and sober truths because his brilliance hews so closely to our everyday experiences."—David Roediger

    "T-Bone Slim wrote the way an arsonist sets fires."—Franklin Rosemont

    "T-Bone Slim lived his life in North America, but he created a world of his own. This world was rooted in the harsh realities of migrant workers’ lives, but at the same time it was a world of fantasy, black humor, and language play, free from time and place. This world is just as alive and recognizable today as it was in his time."—Kirsti Salmi-Niklander

    "[T-Bone Slim] was the laureate of the logging camps."—Harvey O’Connor

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    Contents
    Foreword, David R. Roediger
    Introduction: Mysteries of a Hobo’s Life, Owen Clayton and Iain McIntyre
    Editors’ Note

    Selected Writings of T-Bone Slim

    1919–1921
    Only a Mouse in Jail
    The Popular Wobbly
    An Earfull
    Just before the Panic, Mother!
    Twenty Years
    My Respects—Apology
    Soup Lines
    Mysteries of a Hobo’s Life
    Half-and-Half
    Headin’ In
    Headin’ In

    1922
    The Lumberjack’s Prayer
    Lots of Sympathy but No Help
    An Experience
    Sulphur and Molasses
    Overalls
    The Stuff Heroes Are Made Of
    Normalcy Has Arrived
    Das Kapital
    The Power of These Two Hands
    Consistently Speaking
    Nosebags

    1923
    Best People
    T-Bone Slim Discusses
    Between These Two
    Unfinished Business
    Speed of the Tongue
    War
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: The Off-Set
    Golf
    T-Bone Slim Extends Himself to Discuss Education
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: Sample Camps
    Off Colors
    Odds and Ends
    All I Know
    The Whole Hog: Of Emotions Raised by Charity
    Prepare for the Worst
    Must or Not-to-Must, or Freaks of Nature
    Sweet Charity
    Walking with the Dead
    Stand without Hitching
    An Eighty Year Boy
    Early History
    Starving amidst Too Much

    1924
    Mr. Hammond Deggs
    T-Bone Slim Discusses a Peace Plan
    Some Star! (The Solidarity of Desperation)
    I See, Says I
    Rights vs. Plights
    Mostly Song
    Indiana Moon
    Don’t Threaten
    Rock of Ages
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: Safety First
    T-Bone Slim Discusses
    Bugs and Fords
    True to Form
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: Discrimination
    Interlocking
    An Earfull

    1925
    Oranges
    To My Friend
    The Passing Show
    Cross Word Puzzle
    Industrial Unionism
    The United Affront
    From Murder to Re-Action
    Beseech and Collect
    T-Bone Slim Says: Figures Lie
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: Chop Suey
    T-Bone Slim Discusses
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: War
    Shortcuts

    1926
    Hall of Fame
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: Wry-Bread—
    Go or Melt
    T-Bone Slim Discusses the Laughing Dog
    Information
    T-Bone Slim Discusses: How Do They Do It
    Reporting the Reports
    Taxing Our Spirit
    The Trend
    A Restaurant Is No Stronger Than Its Weakest Coffee
    Now-a-Days
    Boneyard

    1927
    Boneyard
    Concessionaires?
    “Origin of Fatal Explosion Baffles All Investigation”
    Boneyard
    Rough Logic: Seeing’s Believing
    Razzpectability!
    Untitled
    Untitled

    1928–1929
    Boneyard
    That “Triple Threat”
    Passing the Plate
    Untitled
    Junk, or Close Quarters
    “Yes”—Men
    How Poems Are Made
    Work versus Ultra Violet
    Psycholeragising Wealth—and Time
    The Power of Tears
    Long Island Sound
    The Taste That Tells
    Put a Head on It

    1930
    Where Lies Safety?
    The Dizzy Race
    A Ghost Story
    Looking Things Over
    “Sundownitis”
    It Do Seem So—
    A Peach of a Story
    T-Bone Slim Takes to the Air, or Saved in the Nick of Time
    Elastic Transportation
    A Survey
    Measured Tread
    A Touching Story
    On Popular Sanitation

    1931–1932
    Three Bottles
    Say It with Flowers
    Slim Is Dissatisfied with His Looks
    Slim Gets Nervous
    A Mosquito’s Lunch
    “Will There Be Another War?”
    Roosevelt Was Right
    Raising a Family
    What Was in the Wrapper?
    The Hybrid
    Thumbs Down
    Untitled
    Race Hatred
    That’s That!
    Side Door Pullman Philosopher

    1933–1936
    T-Bone Economics
    Untitled Article
    Untitled Manuscript Notes
    Resurrection
    Untitled Manuscript Notes
    Chinese Wisecracks
    Extemporaneous Bath
    Extra! T. B. Slim’s Golden Discovery Cures Everything!
    Untitled Manuscript Notes
    It Should Be Labor Day

    1937–1939
    T-Bone Slim Takes a Look at the Show
    Why Ask the Boss for Recognition
    Sit-Down Strikes Too Good to Stop
    The Movie Stars—and a Picket Line
    Charity Covers a Multitude of Transgressions!
    Put the Boss in Overalls, Says T-Bone Slim
    The Purest Ray Serene
    T-Bone Slim Calls for a Housecleaning
    The Best of a Bad Bargain Is Plenty Tough
    Supplying Arms and a Matter of Business Ethics
    Street Beggars
    Private Letter
    When Privates Fight War by Telephone
    One Man Show Would Please Our Parasites
    We Don’t Want Dictatorship of Any Color

    1940–1942
    Nobody Is Shooting at the Rulers
    Should Indians Have Registered the Foreigners?
    How Slim Brought Peace to Frazee
    Masters Start War but Won’t Stay to Fight
    Don’t Stop to Rest on Dead Center
    Politicians Will Squirm after the War
    Warning of Cannon Fodder Shortage for War of 1960
    Produce for Use and Peace Will Come at Last
    I Didn’t Know It Was Loaded
    Yes, Labor Is Partly to Blame
    Responses to T-Bone Slim
    To T-Bone Slim
    George Baker
    T-Bone Slim Ill
    “Editor Worker”
    Why No News from Our “T-Bone Slim”?
    Sam Murray
    A Reader Appreciates Our T-Bone Slim
    Interviewing T-Bone Slim
    Covami
    Foes Recognize Power of Our Inimitable Columnist, T-Bone Slim
    Hobo Poet
    Anonymous
    Work People’s College Youngsters Study and Frolic
    O.K.L.
    A Torch for T-Bone Slim
    Floyd Hoke-Miller
    Yours for the IWW
    “Old Nick”
    Slim’s Obituary
    Homage to T-Bone Slim
    Franklin Rosemont
    A Man Called America
    Ville-Juhani Sutinen
    Themes in the Writing of T-Bone Slim

    Acknowledgments
    Further Reading
    Index

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