A new model of health emerged in Britain between 1870 and 1939. Centered on the working body, organized around the concept of efficiency, and grounded in scientific understandings of human labor, scientists, politicians, and capitalists of the era believed that national economic productivity could be maximized by transforming the body of the worker into a machine. At the core of this approach was the conviction that worker productivity was intimately connected to worker health.Under this new "science of work," fatigue was seen as the ultimate pathology of the working-class body, reducing workers' capacity to perform continued physical or mental labor. As Steffan Blayney shows, the equation between health and efficiency did not go unchallenged. While biomedical and psychological experts sought to render the body measurable, governable, and intelligible, ordinary men and women found ways to resist the logics of productivity and efficiency imposed on them, and to articulate alternative perspectives on work, health, and the body.
Author(s): Steffan Blayney
Series: Activist Studies of Science & Technology
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 259
City: Amherst
Cover
Front Matter
Series
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Discovery of Fatigue
Chapter 2: Industrial Physiology and the Productive Body
Chapter 3: Industrial Psychology and the Human Factor
Chapter 4: The Market in Efficiency
Chapter 5: The Worker’s Voice
Conclusion
Notes
Index
Back Cover