[Marxism] Union struggle at Harpers

2011-02-24 Thread dave x
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http://www.observer.com/print/140136

'Harper's' Bizarre: How the House of Twain Became a House of Pain
By Kat Stoeffel
February 22, 2011 | 8:40 p.m


On a bright winter morning last January, John R. Rick MacArthur,
publisher of Harper's Magazine, walked into editor Roger D. Hodge's
office and fired him. It was so unexpected that when Mr. Hodge told
the magazine's literary editor, Ben Metcalf, what had happened, his
colleague laughed in disbelief.

Three Fridays ago, in the offices of Levy Ratner, the law firm of the
United Auto Workers Local 2110, two lawyers representing Harper's
management laid off Mr. Metcalf, a 17-year veteran whom other staffers
described as the soul and conscience of Harper's. Another pair of
lawyers present, representing the staff's union, objected that the
termination was illegal, as Harper's vice president, Lynn Carlson,
watched in silence.

It was a painful year in the life of a magazine that has appeared
continuously since 1850, never missing a month. In the wake of Mr.
Hodge's firing, several senior staffers decamped, and the staff
unionized, with Mr. Metcalf as union leader. An increasingly bitter
dispute has ensued between labor and management in an office where all
parties come to work with uncommon passion.

A document drawn up by a lawyer for Harper's management three months
earlier displays the ironies of the scenario. The aim was to prove
that editors of Mr. Metcalf's rank are management, not labor, but the
document more vividly serves as an argument for Mr. Metcalf's
indispensability. Ellen Rosenbush, who succeeded Mr. Hodge as editor,
testified to the National Labor Relations Board that she and the
employees regarded Mr. Metcalf as her second-in-command, and that he
had enormous editorial influence. The document reports on Mr.
Metcalf and other editors' authoritative taste and trustworthy hiring
recommendations. Of Ms. Rosenbush, Mr. MacArthur's lawyer writes, She
is, in effect, a rubber stamp.

Mr. MacArthur believes that the unionization arose from bitterness
about personnel changes. After he fired Mr. Hodge, he believes Mr.
Metcalf wanted the job. Unionization was, in his eyes, a power play.

It's clear that some people on staff are still upset that Ben Metcalf
wasn't made editor, Mr. MacArthur told The Observer.

Since the motives behind a union are, as a matter of law,
irrelevant, Mr. Metcalf told The Observer in an email, not even the
ludicrously false ones imputed to me can excuse the treatment I and my
fellow editors have lately received from the management at Harper's
Magazine.

Mr. MacArthur cited financial concerns and claimed that Mr. Metcalf's
work could most easily be absorbed by other staffers.

We have filed unfair labor practices charges against Harper's
Magazine for their failure to bargain in good faith about this
layoff, said Maida Rosenstein, the union's UAW representative.

Mr. Metcalf's layoff became effective immediately. He was at the time
in the middle of editing a cover story about Mark Twain by Lewis H.
Lapham, a short story by Alice Munro and Thomas Frank's column. When
he went to the Harper's office to sort through years of galleys and
correspondence, he found his belongings had already been packed into
boxes.

Mr. MacArthur fell in love with Harper's as an undergraduate at
Columbia in 1977, when he covered a speech by then editor Mr. Lapham
for Columbia Spectator. He became a devoted reader and invited Mr.
Lapham to address the college journalists at their annual banquet.

I had no contact with Lewis between the Blue Pencil Dinner and the
day I called him, more than four years later, to tell him we were
trying to organize the rescue, Mr. MacArthur told The Observer. In
those four years, Harper's had suffered near-fatal mismanagement under
the Minneapolis Star  Tribune Company. In June of 1980, the company
announced it would cease publication of the magazine.

Though only 23 years old at the time, Mr. MacArthur was well placed to
save Harper's. His grandfather was the insurance billionaire who
founded the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, famous for
its genius grants. His father, J. Roderick MacArthur, was
disinherited but quickly made his own fortune through the
collectible-plate emporium Bradford Exchange and the gadget catalog
Hammacher Schlemmer. (Harper's employees receive the catalogs in their
mailboxes and are eligible for discounts.) J. Roderick still sat on
the board of the MacArthur Foundation. His son convinced him and the
board to buy the magazine.

I think the romance of saving something so historically important
appealed to him, and he trusted my judgment, Mr. MacArthur said. With
Harper's safe, Mr. MacArthur returned to his career as a reporter,
with stints at the Chicago Sun-Times and United Press 

Re: [Marxism] Union struggle at Harpers

2011-02-24 Thread Tom Cod
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that figures.  A good take on the history of Harper's and its rightward
drift is former editor Willie Morris' book New York Days. Morris was the
editor in the 60s being forced out in 1971 by the owners who shifted the
editorial policy in a more conservative direction.  Recently a bio of Morris
was published as well that focuses on this.

http://www.amazon.com/New-York-Days-Willie-Morris/dp/0316583987/ref=sr_1_1?s=booksie=UTF8qid=1298572541sr=1-1

http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=13441

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Re: [Marxism] Union struggle at Harpers

2011-02-24 Thread michael perelman
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Very sad story.


-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA
95929

530 898 5321
fax 530 898 5901
http://michaelperelman.wordpress.com


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