|
CONSIDERING THE TOLL IN LIVES lost
and shortened by disease, America's workplaces have indeed created a
quiet sickness in which the individual tragedies are largely unseen by
the public. Far too many workers of all descriptions experience a quiet
sickness within their own bodies as the cumulative effect of long-term
exposure to toxic chemicals and carcinogens finally manifests itself.
Mr. Dotter first encountered what
was to become the inspiration for this book's title in a humble textile
mill community in Greenville, South Carolina. As it turned out, the
village's cotton mill workers had contracted Brown Lung disease as a
consequence of exposure to cotton dust while on the job at the local
mill. Byssinosis victims cannot usually sleep through the night due to
constant coughing brought on by the disease. The community had these
signs erected to help victims rest at any time of day.
(TX43-F26-78) |
The images in this
book and traveling exhibit are a 25-year chronicle of the individual
cost in health and lives lost by those who perform essential but often
unnecessarily hazardous tasks to make the U.S. economy one of the most
productive and profitable in the world. Dotter brings to these
photographs a sense of compassion expressed simply in the credo: "I
feel rage when people are not properly treated. I want my photographs to
convey the intensity of feeling that I experience." The images in
this volume are visual evidence of what he so deeply believes. Published
by AIHA Press Format: 9-1/2 inches x 10-1/2 inches, 172 pages, 100 lb.
dull coated paper, 150 varnished duotones, with dust jacket. Photography
Subjects
-
Health
Care
-
Public
Safety
-
Construction/Maintenance
Trades
-
Agriculture/Food
Production
-
Textile/Garment
Industries
-
Office/Communications
-
Chemical/Workplace
Environment
-
Coal
Mining
-
Automobile/Heavy
Manufacturing
-
Wood
Products
-
Activism
-
Job
Satisfaction
|
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.
|