Portfolio Project – Norma Rae

1985 Words4 Pages

“They are free to exploit you, to lie to you, to cheat you and to take away from you what is rightfully yours - your health, a decent wage, a fit place to work” (Asseyev, Rose, Ritt, 1979). In the movie Norma Rae, union organizer Reuben Warshovsky, delivered this powerful speech to workers at the O.P. Henley textile mill. He warned them that without union representation they would continue to be taken advantage of by management. The movie, set in 1978, showed textile workers in a small, southern town who were forced to work long hours for a measly wage in deplorable and unsafe conditions. These workers were characteristically “poorly educated and largely unskilled” (Leiter, 1986, p. 951). The management was neglectful of and apathetic to the health and safety of their workers. Norma Rae, a mill worker, knew that her children were destined to work in the mill like the generations before them. It was a life that they could not escape. Therefore she made it her mission to stand up for her rights, empower her co-workers, and effectively improve the quality of life for mill workers of the future. Norma Rae chronicles the union organizing process from the expression of the workers’ discontent to the ultimate union win. Discontent in the workplace motivates workers to form a union. Though the mill workers in the movie were accustomed to a modest life, they became angry with their somber working conditions and the treatment they received. In one scene, a mill worker verbalized his discontent by referring to working in the mill as a term in jail. Another worker relayed the story of losing her husband to brown lung – a condition caused by prolonged exposure to cotton dust (Lynn, 1976). Additionally, Norma Rae saw firsthand how unsympath... ... middle of paper ... ...on representation and obtain a proper wage and working environment. References Asseyev, T., & Rose, A. (Producer). Ritt, M. (Director). (1979). Norma Rae [Motion picture]. United States: Twentieth Century Fox. Fossum, J. (2012). Labor relations: Development, structure, process (11th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. Leiter, J. (1986). Reactions to Subordination: Attitudes of Southern Textile Workers. Social Forces, 64(4), 948-974. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. Lynn, F. (1976). The dust in Willie's lungs. Nation, 222(7), 209. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. Noe, Hollenbeck, Gerhart, & Wright, 2007, R. A., Hollenbeck, J. R., Gerhart, B., & Wright, P. M. (2007). Fundamentals of human resource management (2nd ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill/Irwin. Weil, D. (1991). Enforcing OSHA: The role of labor unions. Industrial Relations, 30(1), 20. Retrieved from EBSCOhost.

Open Document