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The dearth of the clinic: Lead, air, and agency in twentieth-century America

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Abstract

By surveying myriad ways that twentieth-century American experts and nonexperts grappled with the health implications of aerial exposures to lead or substances that may have contained lead, this paper urges medical historians' attention toward environments - workplaces, homes and the outdoors - and their extrabodily ontology. Health histories framed around dust, toxins, fumes, and pollution rather than around particular diseases challenge long-accepted narratives, such as Hibbert Hill's old generalization about a "New Public Health" shift from "the environment to the individual." Greater environmental focus can also advance "bottom-up" health history. Pushing the gaze of twentieth-century medical and public health historians beyond hospitals, "public health" departments, clinically confirmable disease, and "patient" roles, it draws historians' attention to health-related realms in which laypeople often claimed greater knowledge and competence.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)255-291+397-398
JournalJournal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Volume58
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2003

Keywords

  • Domestic hygiene
  • Environment
  • Housing
  • Industrial hygiene
  • Lead
  • Lead poisoning
  • New Public Health
  • Pollution
  • Twentieth century
  • Workers

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