The Meaning of National GuildsMacmillan, 1918 - 452 pages |
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Page vii
... RECONSTRUCTION OF TRADE UNIONISM • 3. THE FUTURE POLICY VI . THE MIRAGE OF RECONSTRUCTION · VII . THE TRANSITION TO NATIONAL GUILDS • 122 OF TRADE UNION 161 · • 203 263 • • 301 • · 339 • 445 VIII . NATIONAL GUILDS IN BEING IX . PROBLEMS ...
... RECONSTRUCTION OF TRADE UNIONISM • 3. THE FUTURE POLICY VI . THE MIRAGE OF RECONSTRUCTION · VII . THE TRANSITION TO NATIONAL GUILDS • 122 OF TRADE UNION 161 · • 203 263 • • 301 • · 339 • 445 VIII . NATIONAL GUILDS IN BEING IX . PROBLEMS ...
Page 36
... Reconstruction , edited by Huntly Carter , p . 66 . The Industrial Outlook , edited by H. Sanderson Furniss , chapter iii . , pp . 66 , 67 . society.1 The demand for it is the instinctive re- action 36 The Meaning of National Guilds.
... Reconstruction , edited by Huntly Carter , p . 66 . The Industrial Outlook , edited by H. Sanderson Furniss , chapter iii . , pp . 66 , 67 . society.1 The demand for it is the instinctive re- action 36 The Meaning of National Guilds.
Page 57
... reconstruction of society , with the old quarrels forgotten and the co - operation of " master and man " assured by " a spirit of give and take on both sides " ! How natural - and how fatally wrong ! Goodwill , however genuine , can ...
... reconstruction of society , with the old quarrels forgotten and the co - operation of " master and man " assured by " a spirit of give and take on both sides " ! How natural - and how fatally wrong ! Goodwill , however genuine , can ...
Page 59
... Reconstruction , " noble as are many of the ideas which are associated with it , is not without its dangers , since to many people it means only an attempt to " settle " the social problem without solving it . Great questions , however ...
... Reconstruction , " noble as are many of the ideas which are associated with it , is not without its dangers , since to many people it means only an attempt to " settle " the social problem without solving it . Great questions , however ...
Page 60
... Reconstruction ! The path to social freedom is a steep ascent , and there are no short cuts on the way . Despite the thousand terrors , limitations , and wearinesses that are the lot of the poor , despite the miseries of our cities and ...
... Reconstruction ! The path to social freedom is a steep ascent , and there are no short cuts on the way . Despite the thousand terrors , limitations , and wearinesses that are the lot of the poor , despite the miseries of our cities and ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept achieve action activities amalgamation amongst associations authority become body Capitalism capitalist chapter claim class-struggle co-operation Cole Committee common concerned consumer Craft Unionism danger demand democracy democratic economic emancipation employers Encroaching Control essential Fabian fact Federation freedom functions G. D. H. Cole G. K. Chesterton Government Guild Congress Guild idea Guild principles ideal important Industrial Unionism Industrial Unionists interests Joint Councils Labour movement machinery matter means ment monopoly National Guilds League National Guildsmen nationalisation officials organisation outlook Parliament Parliamentary Penty plutocracy political possible problem production profession profiteering question railways realise recognise Reconstruction representatives responsibility revolution revolutionary S. G. Hobson salariat scheme secure seek Self-government in Industry social Socialist society sphere spirit status suggest surrender Syndicalists tion to-day Trade Union Trade Unionists Trades Union Congress true wage-earners wage-slave wage-slavery wage-system wages Whitley Report whole women workers workshop
Popular passages
Page 59 - Working men of England, one word of warning yet: I doubt if you know the bitterness of hatred against freedom and progress that lies at the hearts of a certain part of the richer classes in this country...
Page 210 - The question with me is, not whether you have a right to render your people miserable ; but whether it is not your interest to make them happy.
Page 237 - Means for securing to the workpeople a greater share in and responsibility for the determination and observance of the conditions under which their work is carried on.
Page 32 - It matters nothing to the seller of bricks whether they are to be used in building a palace or a sewer : but it matters a great deal to The seller...
Page 258 - Party holds, just as much the function of government and just as necessary a part of the democratic regulation of industry to safeguard the interests of the community as a whole and those of all grades and sections of private consumers in the matter of prices as it is, by the factory and trade boards acts, to protect the rights of the wage-earning producers in the matter of wages, hours of labor, and sanitation.
Page xiii - We should find the craftsmen's challenge and the blazing democracy of William Morris; the warning of Mr. Belloc against the huge shadow of the servile state and, perhaps, something also of his claim of the individual's control over property; the insistence of Mr. Penty on the evils of industrialism and its large scale organization, and his recovery and bequest to us of the significant and unique word 'guild.
Page 32 - MARSHALI, éd. 1961 11890]. 6. « ... die fact that human agents of production are not bought and sold as machinery and other material agents of production are. The worker sells his work, but he himself remains his own property
Page xiv - We should find something of French syndicalism, with its championship of the producer; something of American industrial unionism, with its clear vision of the need of industrial organization; and something of Marxian socialism, with unsparing analysis of the wage-system by which capitalism exalts itself and enslaves the mass of men.
Page 65 - Hearts just as pure and fair May beat in Belgrave Square As in the lowly air Of Seven Dials.
Page 130 - The objects shall be to uphold the rights of combination of labour ; to improve in every direction the general position and status of the workers by the inauguration of a policy that shall secure to them the power to determine the economic and social condition under which they shall work and live ; to secure unity of action amongst all societies forming the federation...