“Riddell shows US sailors struggling for their own emancipation. Especially after 1898, he shows them also as fashioning themselves as white agents of empire. The potential for drama and tragedy is great, and fully realized, in this riveting book.”--David Roediger, author of <i>The Sinking Middle Class: A Political History of Debt, Misery, and the Drift to the Right</i> "The echoes of the past reverberate today, and in few places more vividly than in the pages of Riddell's <i>On the Waves of Empire</i>." --<i>A Sea of Words</i>
Sophisticated and innovative, On the Waves of Empire reveals how maritime labor and shipping capital stitched together, tore apart, and re-stitched the seams of empire.
Introduction: The Seams of Empire
- A Leak in the Ship of State”: Maritime Labor Reform and U.S. Imperial Expansion, 1872-1900
- Does Exclusion Follow the Flag? Imperial Labor Mobilization, Domestic Organized Labor, and the Emergence of a U.S. Metropole, 1902-1908
- Riding the Waves of Empire: Craft Unionism, the La Follette Seamen’s Act of 1915, and the Economic Dimensions of U.S. Imperial Power, 1908 -1915
- Agents of Empire: Merchant Sailors, the Great War, and the New American Merchant Marine, 1898-1919
- They Always Choose Exclusion: Internal Dissent, Postwar U.S. Maritime Policy, and the Fall of the Sailors Unions, 1915-1924
Notes
Bibliography
Index