Workers in the United States are losing sleep. In the global
economy a growing number of employees hold jobs--often more than
one at once--with unpredictable hours. Even before the rise of the
twenty-four-hour workplace, the relationship between sleep and
industry was problematic: sleep is frequently cast as an enemy or a
weakness, while constant productivity and flexibility are glorified
at the expense of health and safety."Dangerously Sleepy" is the
first book to track the longtime association of overwork and sleep
deprivation from the nineteenth century to the present. Health and
labor historian Alan Derickson charts the cultural and political
forces behind the overvaluation--and masculinization--of
wakefulness in the United States. Since the nineteenth century, men
at all levels of society have toiled around the clock by necessity:
steel workers coped with rotating shifts, Pullman porters grappled
with ever-changing timetables and unrelenting on-call status, and
long-haul truckers dealt with chaotic life on the road. But the
dangerous realities of exhaustion were minimized and even
glamorized when the entrepreneurial drive of public figures such as
Thomas Edison and Donald Trump encouraged American men to deny
biological need in the name of success. For workers, resisting
sleep became a challenge of masculine strength.This lucid history
of the wakeful work ethic suggests that for millions of American
men and women, untenable work schedules have been the main factor
leading to sleep loss, newer ailments such as shift work sleep
disorder, and related morbidity and mortality. "Dangerously Sleepy"
places these public health problems in historical context.
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