
Podcast: Ep371: One Factory and the Bigger Story It Tells
October 22, 2021
Author(s): The New York Times
Podcast: The Book Review
1 / 1One Factory and the Bigger Story It Tells
- 1. One Factory and the Bigger Story It Tells
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In âAmerican Made,â Farah Stockman writes about the downfall of manufacturing employment in the United States by focusing on the lives of workers at one Indianapolis factory that was relocated to Mexico. Stockman, a member of The New York Times editorial board, talks about the book on this weekâs podcast. âI really think weâve seen unions in a death spiral,â she says. âAnd part of the reason is globalization. You had so many people who fought for these manufacturing jobs to be good-paying jobs, and decent jobs that you could raise a family on. They didnât used to be, but they were after the labor movement had a long struggle and a long fight. And as soon as we start seeing pensions and health care and decent wages, and as soon as Blacks and women start getting that stuff, now factories can move away. They can go to other countries. And it really undercut unionsâ ability to demand things and to strike. And you saw a lot less appetite among workers for asking for stuff like that, because now everybody just has to beg those factories to stay.â BenjamĂn Labatut visits the podcast to discuss his book âWhen We Cease to Understand the World,â a combination of fact and fiction about some of the most ground-shifting discoveries in physics. Labatut explains why he gave himself license to imagine the lives and thoughts of some of the scientists featured â Einstein, Schrödinger and Heisenberg among them. âWhat Iâm trying to do is for people to understand just how mad these ideas seemed at the time to the very people who discovered them,â Labatut says. âAnd I had to use these characters for people to get a sense of how brutal the beauty was that these men were seeing for the first time.â Also on this weekâs episode, Tina Jordan looks back at Book Review history as it celebrates its 125th anniversary; Elizabeth Harris has news from the publishing world; and Gal Beckerman and Lauren Christensen talk about what people are reading. Pamela Paul is the host. Here are the books discussed in this weekâs âWhat Weâre Readingâ: âDirty Workâ by Eyal Press âInvisible Childâ by Andrea Elliott âBeautiful World, Where Are Youâ by Sally Rooney
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The New York Times
The world's top authors and critics join host Gilbert Cruz and editors at The New York Times Book Review to talk about the week's top books, what we're reading and what's going on in the literary world. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Also, for more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.