[Gutenberg 24959] • Working With the Working Woman
![[Gutenberg 24959] • Working With the Working Woman](/cover/jRhbU9mmcc4dP8Uo/big/[Gutenberg%2024959]%20%e2%80%a2%20Working%20With%20the%20Working%20Woman.jpg)
- Authors
- Parker, Cornelia Stratton
- Tags
- working class -- united states , united states -- social conditions , women -- employment -- united states
- Date
- 1922-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.20 MB
- Lang
- en
Excerpt from Working With the Working Woman
The number of books on the labor problem is indeed legion. The tragedy of the literature on any dynamic subject is that most of it is written by people who have time to do little else. Perhaps the best books on many subjects will never be written because those folk, who would be most competent to do the writing, through their vital connection with the problem at hand, never find the spare minutes to put their findings down on paper.
There could be no more dynamic subject than labor, since labor is nothing less than human beings, and what is more dynamic than human beings? It is, therefore, the last subject in the world to be approached academically. Yet most of the approach to the problems of labor is academic. Men in sanctuaries forever far removed from the endless hum and buzz and roar of machinery, with an intellectual background and individual ambitions forever far removed from the interests and desires of those who labor in factory and mill, theorize - and another volume is added to the study of labor.
But, points out some one, there are books on labor written by bona-fide workers. First, the number is few.