BalserDiane.1987. Sisterhood and Solidarity: Feminism and Labor in Modern Times.Boston: South End Press.
2.
BarnettBernice McNair.1993. “Invisible Southern Black Women Leaders in the Civil Rights Movement: The Triple Constraints of Gender, Race, and Class,”Gender and Society.7: 2: 162–182.
3.
BookmanAnn.1988. “Unionization in an Electronics Factory: The Interplay of Gender, Ethnicity, and Class” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra (eds.), Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
4.
BurowayMichael.1979. Manufacturing Consent: Changes in the Labor Process under Monopoly Capitalism.Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
5.
CollinsPatricia Hill.1991. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment.New York and London: Routledge, Chapman, and Hall Inc.
6.
CostelloCynthia B.1988. “Women Workers and Collective Action: A Case Study from the Insurance Industry” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra (eds.), Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
7.
CostelloCynthia B.1991. We're Worth It!: Women and Collective Action in the Insurance Workplace.Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
8.
CreightonHannah.1982. “Tied by Double Apron Strings: Female Work Culture and Organization in a Restaurant,”Insurgent Sociologist.11: 3: 59–64.
9.
DaviesMargery W.1982. Women's Place Is at the Typewriter: Office Work and Office Workers 1870-1930.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
10.
DyeNancy Schrom.1975. “Feminism or Unionism?: The New York Women's Trade Union League and the Labor Movement,”Feminist Studies.3: 111–125.
11.
DyeNancy Schrom.1980. As Equals and As Sisters: Feminism, the Labor Movement, and the Women's Trade Union League of New York.Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
12.
EdwardsRichard.1979. Contested Terrain: The Transformation of the Workplace in the Twentieth Century.New York: Basic Books.
13.
EisensteinSarah.1983. Give Us Bread but Give Us Roses.London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
FreemanJo (ed.). 1983. Social Movements of the Sixties and Seventies.New York and London: Longman.
16.
FreemanRichard B., and LeonardJonathan S.1987. “Union Maids: Unions and the Female Work Force” in BrownClair, and PechmanJoseph A. (eds.), Gender in the Workplace.Washington D.C.: The Brookings Institution.
17.
GannageCharlene.1986. Double Day, Double Bind: Women Garment Workers.Toronto: The Women's Press.
18.
GlennEvelyn Nakano, and FeldbergRoslyn L.1979. “Proletarianizing Clerical Work: Technology and Organizational Control in the Office” in ZimbalistAndrew (ed.), Case Studies in the Labor Process.New York: Monthly Review Press.
19.
GlennEvelyn Nakano.1989. “Clerical Work: The Female Occupation” in FreemanJo (ed.), Women: A Feminist Perspective (4e.). Mountain View, California: Mayfield Press.
20.
GoldbergRoberta.1983. Organizing Women Office Workers: Dissatisfaction, Consciousness, and Action.New York: Praeger.
21.
GramsciAntonio.1971. Selections from the Prison Notebooks. Q. Hoare and G. Nowell Smith (trs./eds.). New York: International Publishers.
22.
GramsciAntonio.1977. Selections from Political Writings: Volume 1, 1910-1920. Q. Hoare (tr./ed.). New York: International Publishers.
23.
KanterRosabeth Moss.1977. Men and Women of the Corporation.New York: Basic Books.
24.
KellyRita Mae, and StambaughPhoebe Morgan1991. The Gendered Economy: Work, Careers, and Success.Newbury Park, California: Sage Publications, Inc.
25.
Kessler-HarrisAlice.1975. “Where are the Organized Women Workers?,”Feminist Studies.1: 92–110.
26.
Kessler-HarrisAlice.1982. Out to Work: A History of Wage-Earning Women in the United States.New York: Oxford University Press.
27.
Ladd-TaylorMolly.1985. “Women Workers and the Yale Strike.”Feminist Studies.11: 3: 465–489.
28.
LamphereLouise, and GrenierGuillermo J.1988. “Women, Unions, and ‘Participative Management’: Organizing in the Sunbelt” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra (eds.), Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
29.
LaPointeEleanor.1992. “Relationships with Waitresses: Gendered Social Distance in Restaurant Hierarchies,”Qualitative Sociology.15: 4.
30.
Lipman-BlumenJean.1992. “Connective Leadership: Female Leadership Styles in the 21st Century Workplace,”Sociological Perspectives.35: 1: 183–203.
31.
LuttrellWendy.1988. “The Edison School Struggle: The Reshaping of Working-Class Education and the Women's Movement” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra (eds.), Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
32.
MaggardSally Ward.1990. “Gender Contested: Women's Participation in the Brookside Coal Strike” in WestGuida, and BlumbergRhoda Lois (eds.), Women and Social Protest.New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
33.
MeloshBarbara.1982. The Physician's Hand: Work Culture and Conflict in American Nursing.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
34.
MilkmanRuth.1980. “Organizing the Sexual Division of Labor: Historical Perspectives on ‘Women's Work’ and the American Labor Movement,”Monthly Review.49: 95–150.
35.
MilkmanRuth. (ed.). 1985. Women, Work, and Protest: A Century of United States Women's Labor History.Boston and London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
36.
MillerJoanne.1992. “Gender and Supervision: The Legitimation of Authority in Relationship to Task,”Sociological Perspectives.35: 1: 137–136.
37.
Miller-LoessiKaren.1992. “Toward Gender Integration in the Workplace: Issues at Multiple Levels,”Sociological Perspectives.35: 1: 1–15.
38.
MorgenSandra.1988. “‘It's the Whole Power of the City Against Us!’: The Development of Political Consciousness in a Woman's Health Care Coalition” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra (eds.), Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
39.
PadavicIrene.1992. “Labor Control in a ‘New South’ Community,”Humanity and Society.16: 3: 350–368.
40.
PaulesGreta Foff.1991. Dishing It Out: Power and Resistance among Waitresses in a New Jersey Restaurant.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
41.
SacksKaren Brodkin.1984. “Computers, Ward Secretaries, and a Walkout in a Southern Hospital” in SacksKaren Brodkin, and RemyDorothy (eds.), My Troubles Are Going to Have Trouble With Me: Everyday Trials and Triumphs of Women Workers.New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
42.
SacksKaren Brodkin.1988a. Caring by the Hour: Women, Work, and Organizing at Duke Medical Center.Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
43.
SacksKaren Brodkin.1988b. “Gender and Grassroots Leadership” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra (eds.), Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
44.
SacksKaren Brodkin.1989. “Toward a Unified Theory of Class, Race, and Gender,”American Ethnologist.16: 3: 534–550.
45.
Shapiro-PerlNina.1984. “Resistance Strategies: The Routine Struggle for Bread and Roses” in SacksKaren Brodkin, and RemyDorothy (eds.), My Troubles Are Going to Have Trouble With Me: Everyday Trial and Triumphs of Women Workers.New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
46.
StromSharon Hartman.1983. “Challenging ‘Woman's Place’: Feminism, the Left, and Industrial Unionism in the 1930's,”Feminist Studies.9: 2: 359–386.
47.
SusserIda.1988. “Working-Class Women, Social Protest, and Changing Ideologies” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra, Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
48.
TaxMeredith.1980. The Rising of the Women: Feminist Solidarity and Class Conflict, 1880-1917.New York: Monthly Review Press.
49.
TentlerLeslie Woodcock.1979. Wage-Earning Women: Industrial Work and Family Life in the United States 1900-1930.New York: Oxford University Press.
50.
TurbinCarole.1987. “Reconceptualizing Family, Work, and Labor Organizing: Working Women in Troy, 1860-1890” in BoseChristine, FeldbergRoslyn, and SokoloffNatalie (eds.), Hidden Aspects of Women's Work.New York, Westport, London: Praeger.
51.
VannemanReeve, and CannonLynn Weber1987. The American Perception of Class.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
52.
WertheimerBarbara Mayer.1977. We Were There: The Story of Working Women in America.New York: Pantheon Books.
53.
WertheimerBarbara M., and NelsonAnne H.1989. “Union is Power: Sketches from Women's Labor History” in FreemanJo (ed.), Women: A Feminist Perspective (4e.), Mountain View, California: Mayfield Publishing.
54.
ZavellaPatricia.1988. “The Politics of Race and Gender: Organizing Chicana Cannery Workers in Northern California” in BookmanAnn, and MorgenSandra (eds.), Women and the Politics of Empowerment.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.