Residual Radicalism

Author:

MacKinnon Richard1,MacKinnon Lachlan2

Affiliation:

1. Cape Breton University

2. Concordia University

Abstract

The making of songs is an important, yet under-explored tradition amongst steel workers throughout North America. Steel making has been an essential part of Cape Breton Island’s economy and landscape since the mid-nineteenth century. The first steel mill was constructed in Sydney Mines in the 1870s; a larger mill was built in the newly emerging city of Sydney, the island’s largest centre, by 1901. Distinctive traditions of work and leisure began to emerge amidst the grid-patterned streets and company-owned homes of workers and managers. In the early years of the twentieth century, a close-knit working-class consciousness had taken root in the steel making centre of Sydney, Cape Breton Island. Songs explore topics such as the harsh conditions of work in the steel plant, personalities and places, tragedies, the industrial conflicts of the 1920s, and the attitudes of workers toward management. Many are often tinged with satire and witty analysis of working-class life. Sydney, as with many communities in North America, has profoundly experienced the process of deindustrialization in the latter part of the twentieth century. The last operating coal mines closed in Cape Breton the 1990s and the Sydney Steel plant shut its doors in 2000. This paper explores the questions: what role did songs about steel play in the development of class consciousness during the development of the steel industry in Sydney? Do songs play an equally significant role in the latter part of the twentieth century when the community was undergoing the process of deindustrialization? What types of songs about steel making and the steel mill are found in each of these significant periods in Sydney’s history? An exploration of some of these songs reveal much about how human beings respond to the processes of industrialization and deindustrialization.

Publisher

Consortium Erudit

Reference71 articles.

1. Abrams, James. 1994. “Lost Frames of Reference: Sightings of History and Memory in Pennsylvania’s Documentary Landscape.” In Mary Hufford, ed., Conserving Culture. A New Discourse on Heritage: 24-38. Urbana and Chicago: Published for the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress by the University of Illinois Press.

2. American Folklore Society. 1984. Folklore/Folklife. Washington: American Folklore Society.

3. Barlow, Maude and Elizabeth May. 2000. Frederick Street. Life and Death on Canada’s Love Canal. Toronto: Harper-Collins Ltd.

4. Bishop, Joan. 1990. “Public Ownership and the Welfare State, 1967 to 1976.” In Kenneth Donovan, The Island. New Perspectives on Cape Breton History, 1713-1990: 165-86. Syndey: Acadiensis Press.

5. Bluestone, Barry and Bennett Harrison. 1982. The Deindustrialization of America. Plant Closings, Community Abandonment, and the Dismantling of Basic Industry. New York: Basic Books.

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1. In Tune with the Earth: Musical Protest and Nova Scotian Environmentalism;Acadiensis: Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region / Revue d’histoire de la region atlantique;2016

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