Rebel Girl & Revolution: Mary Anne Trasciatti on Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
- Time:
- Monday, 18 August 2025 : 13:00 - 13:45
- Location:
- Lighthouse Bookshop, 43-45 West Nicolson Street, Edinburgh EH8 9DB

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Mary Anne Trasciatti
A new biography on one of the most important figures in the history of the American labour movement
'A richly drawn portrait of a bold, principled, and savvy woman who deserves to be remembered and celebrated.' — New Pages
“It is certainly time, actually past time, for a revival of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn's saga and her reputation. Guided by the continuing thread of Flynn's civil liberties work, Trasciatti’s Elizabeth Gurley Flynn will be the book to bring her back.” — Paul Buhle
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn was involved in almost every major campaign of the U.S. Left in the first two thirds of the twentieth century. An outstanding orator, writer, and tactician, Flynn is one of the most important figures in the history of the American labor movement. Inspired by the Irish freedom struggle and appalled by the exploitation and grinding poverty she saw around her, she devoted her life to the advancement of civil liberties. Here, Mary Anne Trasciatti traces Flynn’s personal and political life to explore the broader social issues of a fraught era.
Born in 1890, Flynn began her activist career by joining the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) when she was just sixteen, and she ended it as the first female chair of the American Communist Party, a position she held from 1961 until her death in 1964. In the intervening years she organized workers into unions, led strikes, championed women’s rights, supported anti-imperialist movements around the globe, protested deportation, advocated for prison reform, and fought for Black liberation. Above all, she showed absolute devotion to workers and their struggles.
Slandered as an “un-American” in the anticommunist fervor of the 1940s and 1950s, Flynn was eventually ousted from the very organization she helped found, the American Civil Liberties Union, and imprisoned for two years. Though her own movement abandoned her, her commitment to the cause never wavered. This stirring biography illuminates Flynn’s inspiring life and worldview and returns her to her rightful place at the heart of labor and civil liberties history.
About our speaker: MARY ANNE TRASCIATTI is a professor of rhetoric and the director of labor studies at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York. She coedited the collections Where Are the Workers?: Labor’s Stories at Museums and Historic Sites and Talking to the Girls: Intimate and Political Essays on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire.