Breathing race into the machine : the surprising career of the spirometer from plantation to genetics / Lundy Braun.
- Braun, Lundy
- Date:
- [2014]
- Books
About this work
Publication/Creation
Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, [2014]
Physical description
xxix, 271 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Contributors
Notes
"Portions of chapters 1 and 2 were previously published as "Spirometry, Measurement, and Race in the Nineteenth Century," Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 60 (2005): 135-169."
Bibliographic information
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Introduction: Measuring vital capacity -- "Inventing" the spirometer: working class bodies in Victorian England -- Black lungs and white lungs: the science of white supremacy in the nineteenth-century United States -- The professionalization of physical culture: making and measuring whiteness -- Progress and race: vitality in turn-of-the century Britain -- Globalizing spirometry: the "racial factor" in scientific medicine -- Adjudicating disability in the industrial worker -- Diagnosing silicosis: physiological testing in South African gold mines -- Epilogue: how race rakes root.
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status History of MedicineRW.AU.AA8-9Open shelves
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9780816683574
- 0816683573
- 9780816683598
- 081668359X