"In this truly comparative social and environmental history of air pollution, Greenlees deftly weaves public health, regulatory politics and labor relations into a prescient reminder that protecting workers from hazardous workplaces remains a pressing issue on a global scale."— Graham Mooney, Johns Hopkins University, and author of Instrusive Interventions: Public Health, Domestic Space, and<br /> "This is a promising, important, and long-awaited project—the first comparative history of industry-related hazards in the United States and Britain. The author has synthesized a vast body of research, much of it her own original work. At once comprehensive and selective, <i>When the Air Became Important</i> is illuminating scholarship." <br /> — Chris Sellers, Stony Brook University<br />
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
List of Abbreviations
1 Introduction – When does the air in the workplace become important?
2 Textile town and mill environments
3 Tuberculosis in the factory
4 "I used to feel ill with it:" Heat, humidity and fatigue
5 Dust: A New Socio-Environmental Relationship
6 "The noise were horrendous:" The ignored industrial hazard
7 Conclusion: When does the air become important?
Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Index