Hazards of the Job explores the roots of modern
environmentalism in the early-twentieth-century United States. It
was in the workplace of this era, argues Christopher Sellers, that
our contemporary understanding of environmental health dangers
first took shape. At the crossroads where medicine and science met
business, labor, and the state, industrial hygiene became a
crucible for molding midcentury notions of corporate interest and
professional disinterest as well as environmental concepts of the
'normal' and the 'natural.' The evolution of industrial hygiene
illuminates how powerfully battles over knowledge and objectivity
could reverberate in American society: new ways of establishing
cause and effect begat new predicaments in medicine, law,
economics, politics, and ethics, even as they enhanced the
potential for environmental control. From the 1910s through the
1930s, as Sellers shows, industrial hygiene investigators fashioned
a professional culture that gained the confidence of corporations,
unions, and a broader public. As the hygienists moved beyond the
workplace, this microenvironment prefigured their understanding of
the environment at large. Transforming themselves into linchpins of
science-based production and modern consumerism, they also laid the
groundwork for many controversies to come.