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From Google Books: Editorial Review - Kirkus Reviews - A slow death is probably what you want to call it,"" said an Anaconda aluminum worker after describing his symptoms of emphysema and chlorine gas poisoning. Scott's survey of the epidemic persistence of 19th century horrors in industry ranges from beryllium disease to loss of life and limb in mines and refineries -- owing to industry pressure, accidents are vastly under-counted and employers often deny that diseases are job related. Armed with such ineffectual auxiliaries as the Industrial Health Foundation, and coddled by certain labor unions, the industrialists sit in their air-conditioned offices calculating that workmen's compensation (a pittance) is cheaper than investment in safety measures. One aspect Scott herself merely notes is the way the bonus system and the 1970's speedup make workers ignore safety insofar as safety slows them up. This three-year Ford Foundation funded study -- relying more on interviews than tabulations -- ably sketches the size and the pain of the slaughter but unlike Emma Rothschild in Paradise Lost (1973), for example, Scott does not press for the contextual grasp of technological and financial developments (or non-developments) which would locate the investigation in something more than abstract profiteering. This remains a valuable contribution and a highly moving one.
Thank you, Rachel Scott, for your fantastic book! Seeing a documentary about the NYC Triangle Waistshirt factory fire on it's 100th anniversary made me want to re-read this book.I read Muscle and Blood for a college course many years ago and it's one of two books from college I still keep on my bookshelf. Whenever I read or see a plant or industry failing to provide a safe workplace, I think of it again. I am more pro industrialist than union and organized labor, but I have to agree that in some cases, some industries and companies just can't see that providing a safe work place and paying a fair wage is the best way to make money.For anyone who wants to read about the incidents and tragedies that have shaped the American workplace, this is a must read. And if working conditions have improved, I suspect this book is one reason why.I hope that someday it will be released in ebook format. It's easy to read, well documented, very relevant still today, and I highly recommend it.