The Bread-Winners

E431962

The Bread-Winners is an 1883 anti-labor novel by American author and statesman John Hay that satirizes labor unions and class conflict in post–Civil War industrial America.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
The Bread-Winners canonical 1

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Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf anti-labor novel
novel
anonymouslyPublished true
associatedWithMovement Gilded Age conservatism
author John Hay NERFINISHED
controversial true
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
depicts conflict between workers and employers
labor strikes
firstPublicationFormat serial publication
genre political fiction
satire
hasApproximateLength novel-length work
hasAuthorNationality American
hasAuthorOccupation statesman
hasForm prose fiction
hasIdeology anti-socialist
pro-capitalist
hasMoralPerspective supportive of property-owning classes
suspicious of organized labor
hasPoliticalContent true
hasPublicationCentury 19th century
hasTitleLanguage English
historicalContext Gilded Age United States NERFINISHED
influencedBy post–Civil War labor unrest in the United States
literaryPeriod 19th-century American literature
mainTheme class conflict
labor unions
post–Civil War industrial America
narrativePerspective third-person narrative
notableFor critique of working-class activism
hostile portrayal of labor organizing
originalLanguage English
politicalOrientation anti-labor
publicationType newspaper serial
publicationYear 1883
reflectsViewpointOf conservative elites of the Gilded Age
satirizes class conflict
labor unions
organized labor
setInContext industrialization in the United States
setInPeriod post–Civil War era
targetAudience middle-class and upper-class readers
timePeriodOfWork 19th century

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Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

John Hay notableWork The Bread-Winners