Social Sciences, asked by tejal1244, 1 year ago

what was the condition of the workers after the first world war​

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Answered by Anonymous
0

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The best answers may be found in Bill Mauldin's book Back Home (1948.) Then beginning his civilian career, this gifted cartoonist had a sharp eye for current anxieties, e.g. food and gasoline shortages, resettlement of combat veterans with PTSD, the beginnings of the Cold War with the Soviet empire etc. See also occasional items in the New Yorker by A.J. Liebling. The only major topic of the 1960s that both observers failed to notice in the 1940s was race relations, i.e. the civil rights claims of black Americans with wartime experience in other countries.

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Answered by melvindon87
1

Across the major belligerent powers, industrial production and the mobilization and organization of industrial labor became central to the conduct of the First World War. States and private industries restructured labor towards large-scale production, employing increasing numbers of semiskilled and unskilled laborers, women and men, and laborers from across the world. Organized labor’s political power saw some significant increases during the war, and declining real wages and living conditions for many industrial workers led to protests and an increasingly radicalized workers’ politics by the war’s end.

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