The second half of the nineteenth century is a period in global history marked by a great unionizing drive among unskilled and semi-skilled workers in the industrialized nations, which had reshaped the labour movements in many parts of the Northern hemisphere. It was during the 1880’s that many basic industries around Great Britain, such as mines, cotton mills, iron and steel works began to promote strike actions that would actively advocate for better working conditions and fair wages. However their class-struggle was for the recognition of the rights and the title of respect to civilized humans . These events changed the discourse of trade unionism in a global scale, yet the Great London Dock Strike of 1889 in Great Britain seems to be one of the most impactful strikes, which amidst major eruptions of unrest and mass mobilization of the working-class workers were able to give rise to a socialist unionist of national standing. …show more content…
Therefore, this paper aims to analyze and compare how the Great London Dock Strike of 1889 was understood and perceived both during the time of the event in 1889, and decades later, as a historical account. The goal of such a comparison is to critically analyze the subjectiveness of the historical narratives of the Great Dock Strike, by dissecting the reports of the event written in the late 1880’s, such as the memoirs of Ben Tillett and Tom Mann, as well as the historical researches and accounts of a later