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Dear MERSENNE Subscribers,

I hope the following -- which I would like to offer you at a special price -- will be of interest to you:

Sick Building Syndrome and the Problem of Uncertainty
Environmental Politics, Technoscience, and Women Workers
Michelle Murphy
 
"Sick Building Syndrome and the Problem of Uncertainty is all at once about the women's health movement, ventilation, cybernetics, virology, and chemical toxicity. It is labor history and medical history wrapped into a fiercely disputed knot. Unraveling that tangle, and using the Syndrome to tell us about who we were at the turn of the millennium, Michelle Murphy has written a remarkable, insightful book."-Peter Galison, author of Einstein's Clocks, Poincaré's Maps: Empires of Time 

"How does an illness come into being? In this provocative study, Michelle Murphy takes us on a journey into the making of an environmental illness, into the spaces of the modern office building, gendered labor practices, and workers' bodies to reveal what is perceived and what is invisible in the built environment where many Americans spend their working days. How sick buildings and indoor air pollution became visible problems in environmental health is a story that takes us far beyond the architectural history of office buildings. It takes us deep into the architecture of reality: into how we know and what we know about environmental exposures and the uncertainties they pose both to knowledge and human health."-Gregg Mitman, author of The State of Nature: Ecology, Community, and American Social Thought, 1900-1950 

Before 1980, sick building syndrome did not exist. By the 1990s, it was among the most commonly investigated occupational health problems in the United States. Afflicted by headaches, rashes, and immune system disorders, office workers-mostly women-protested that their workplaces were filled with toxic hazards; yet federal investigators could detect no chemical cause. This richly detailed history tells the story of how sick building syndrome came into being: how indoor exposures to chemicals wafting from synthetic carpet, ink, adhesive, solvents, and so on became something that relatively privileged Americans worried over, felt, and ultimately sought to do something about. As Michelle Murphy shows, sick building syndrome provides a window into how environmental politics moved indoors.

Sick building syndrome embodied a politics of uncertainty that continues to characterize contemporary American environmental debates. Michelle Murphy explores the production of uncertainty by juxtaposing multiple histories, each of which explains how an expert or lay tradition made chemical exposures perceptible or imperceptible, existent or nonexistent. She shows how uncertainty emerged from a complex confluence of feminist activism, office worker protests, ventilation engineering, toxicology, popular epidemiology, corporate science, and ecology. In an illuminating case study, she reflects on EPA scientists' efforts to have their headquarters recognized as a sick building. Murphy brings all of these histories together in what is not only a thorough account of an environmental health problem but also a much deeper exploration of the relationship between history, materiality, and uncertainty. 

Michelle Murphy is Assistant Professor in the History Department and the Women and Gender Studies Institute at the University of Toronto

   
Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
1. Man in a Box: Building-Machines and the Science of Comfort 19
2. Building Ladies into the Office Machine 35
3. Feminism, Surveys, and Toxic Details 57
4. Indoor Pollution at the Encounter of Toxicology and Popular Epidemiology 81
5. Uncertainty, Race, and Activism at the EPA 111
6. Building Ecologies, Tobacco, and the Politics of Multiplicity 131
7. How to Build Yourself a Body in a Safe Space 151
Epilogue 179
Notes 181
Bibliography 213
Index 241 

 
DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS
264 pages (May 2006)
21 Illustrations
ISBN 0-8223-3671-5 Paperback - £13.95

SPECIAL DISCOUNTED PRICE OF £9.75 to MERSENNE Subscribers 

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