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Tables of Contents for Eight Hours for What We Will
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Context: 1. Workers in an industrial city, 1870-1920
Part II. Culture: The Working-Class World of the Late Nineteenth-Century: 2. The rise of the saloon
3. Immigrant workers and the fourth of july
Part III. Conflict: Struggles Over Working-Class Leisure in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries: 4. The struggle over the saloon, 1870-1910
5. The struggle over recreational space: the development of parks and playgrounds
6. The struggle over the fourth: the safe and sane july fourth movement and the immigrant working class
Part IV. Culture, Conflict, and Change: The Working-Class World of the Early Twentieth Century: 7. The commercialization of leisure: the rise of a leisure market and the persistence of the saloon
8. From rum shop to Rialto: workers and movies
Conclusion
Abbreviations used in notes
Notes
A note on sources
Index.