Out of Work chronicles the history of unemployment in the United States.
It traces the evolution of the problem of joblessness from the early
decades of the nineteenth-century to the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Challenging the widely held notion that the United States was a
labour-scarce society in which jobs were plentiful, it argues that
unemployment played a major role in American history long before the
crash of the stock market in 1929. Focusing on the state of
Massachusetts, Professor Kevssar analyses the economic and social
changes that gave birth to the prevalent concept of unemployment.
Drawing on previously untapped sources - including richly detailed
statistics and vivid verbatim testimony - he demonstrates that
joblessness was a pervasive feature of working-class life from the 1870s
to the 1920s. The book describes the ingenious, yet quite costly,
strategies that unemployed workers devised to cope with the joblessness
in the absence of formal governmental assistance. It also explores the
many dimensions of working-class life that were profoundly affected by
recurrent layoffs and the chronic uncertainty of work. Finally, it
demonstrates that the fundamental contours of the Massachusetts
experience were repeated, sooner or later, throughout the United States.