Honey – Race & the CIO
Faue – Women & Union Revival
Solidarity (Or Lack of It)
Radicalism & the Popular Front
Big Takeaways
100

This group was the backbone of CIO organizing in the South.

Who were Black workers?

100

Faue’s story centers on this city.

What is Minneapolis?

100

Both authors say unions depended on this.


What is solidarity?

100

This coalition brought liberals, radicals, and unions together.


What is the Popular Front?

100

Both authors show unions were built from here.

What is the bottom up?

200

Honey says unions in the South could not succeed without this.

What is interracial organizing?

200

Women expanded unionism beyond the shop floor into this space.

What is the community (or family)?

200

This party supported labor and relief in Minneapolis.

What is the Farmer–Labor Party?

200

These workers are centered in both readings.

Who are women and Black workers?

300

This union organized Black workers in cotton and food industries in Memphis.

What is UCAPAWA?

300

This mostly female industry was key to women’s organizing.

DAILY DOUBLE:

What is the garment industry?

300

Being called this was a common attack on CIO organizers.

What is “Communist” (or “red”)?

300

Both readings challenge this classic labor story.

What is “white male industrial workers only”?

500

Faue says unions were held together by this metaphor.

What is the family?

500

This system limited how far interracial unions could go.

DAILY DOUBLE:

What is Jim Crow?

500

Together, Honey and Faue show labor was about more than wages—it was about this.

What is community survival?