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A Working Democracy: Jane Addams on the Meaning of Work

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 August 2013

Abstract

By exploring Addams's lifelong fascination with work, this essay analyzes the ways in which her understanding of work fundamentally shaped her wider political vision. For Addams, work was the foundation of not only a personal sense of identity, but also a collective democratic character. The workplace had the potential to be the model of a cooperative community, providing a venue for social solidarity and civic reciprocity. By working together, Americans would develop a more cosmopolitan and inclusive politics. In short, the essay argues that Addams's political thought was an attempt to revitalize democracy by giving meaning to work. It concludes by suggesting that her arguments can be applied to many contemporary political problems, and that today's democratic theory and practice would be enlivened by a renewed attention to work.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 2013 

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References

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42 Although the term “museum” was conscientiously chosen, it can mislead today's readers. The Labor Museum was both an active workshop and a teaching center, educating students across class, generation, and ethnicity in traditional crafts and industrial arts. For a description of the Labor Museum, see Washburne, Marion Foster, “A Labor Museum,” in Eighty Years at Hull-House, ed. Davis, Allen F. and McCree, Mary Lynn (Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1969), 7782Google Scholar.

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91 Ibid., 94.

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93 Ibid., 145.

94 Ibid., 67.

95 Ibid., 64.

96 Ibid., 112.

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