
Sabotage
by Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
16 chapters0h 54m
About this book
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn's "Sabotage" presents a bold and provocative examination of labor resistance that challenges conventional thinking about worker power and industrial conflict. Written by one of America's most influential socialist organizers, this groundbreaking work argues for the legality and strategic necessity of sabotage as a form of conscious withdrawal of workers' industrial efficiency—a tactic Flynn saw as essential to labor struggle and economic justice.
Published during a turbulent era of American labor history, Flynn's analysis explores how workers can leverage their control over production to challenge exploitative systems and demand fair treatment. Rather than endorsing mindless destruction, she presents sabotage as a calculated, disciplined response to corporate oppression and a tool for workers to reclaim dignity in their workplaces.
This political and economic commentary remains strikingly relevant today, offering historical perspective on labor movements, worker rights, and the ongoing tension between capital and labor. Flynn's passionate, clear-eyed approach to workplace resistance makes complex political theory accessible and compelling.
"Sabotage" is ideal for labor historians, activists, students of political thought, and anyone seeking to understand alternative perspectives on economic resistance and worker empowerment. Whether you're exploring radical history or examining the roots of modern labor debates, Flynn's words continue to spark important conversations about power, justice, and the tools available to ordinary workers.
