Adelheid Popp, The Autobiography of a Working Woman (1913)
- I was continually with my thoughts in quite another world
Two points of view struggled for supremacy in me
How I Became a Rebel, The Labor Herald (1922)
- Eugene V. Debs
William Ross Knudsen
Upton Sinclair
Lincoln Steffens
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
James Maurer
William Z. Foster
Robert Minor
Hourwich and Taylor, eds., I Am A Woman Worker: A Scrapbook of Autobiographies (1936)
- The Idea that “what happened to me” is important
That night I had dreams of the mill
A symbol both of Revolution and elegance
Richard Wright, Black Boy (American Hunger): A Record of Childhood and Youth (1945)
- What Does Reading Do?
To Dream the Dreams the State Said Were Wrong
Cheap pulp tales enlarged my knowledge of the world
On Workers and Intellectuals
- “The Working Girl and Labor Education,” First National Conference on Workers Education in the United States (1921).
“Unionizing the Brain Worker,” Labor Age (1922).
“Labor and Its Allies: 20th Century Intellectuals,” George P. Hedley, ed., Lessons from Labor History (1940).
“Relations within the Class,” English Lessons On History of Labor Movements, Works Progress Administration of South Carolina (c. 1938).




