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- Title
Talent on Strike: The Musicians' Union and the Early Agonies of the Creative Class.
- Authors
Miller, Rachel
- Abstract
In November 1865, the membership of New York City's Musical Mutual Protective Union went on strike. Spurred by low wages and professional disrespect, union men came together around an ensemble ethic emphasizing mutual obligation among players. This powerful code of conduct—enforced through the union's internal structure and the musicians' employment model—sustained several weeks of strike action in the face of public indifference. It also pushed musicians to close their ranks and ensured the homogeneity of the orchestra pit. The strike invites us to historicize the "creative economy," with equal attention to the material conditions of workers and the durable conceptual categories created by the culture industries.
- Subjects
NEW York (N.Y.); LABOR unions; CODES of ethics; MUSICIANS; CULTURAL industries; HOMOGENEITY; APATHY
- Publication
Labor: Studies in Working Class History of the Americas, 2021, Vol 18, Issue 2, p1
- ISSN
1547-6715
- Publication type
Article