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Being and well-being : health and the working bodies of Silicon Valley / J.A. English-Lueck.

De Gruyter Stanford University Press Backlist eBook-Package 2000-2013 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
English-Lueck, J. A. (June Anne), 1953-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Health behavior--California--Santa Clara Valley (Santa Clara County).
Health behavior.
Health attitudes--California--Santa Clara Valley (Santa Clara County).
Health attitudes.
Public health--Anthropological aspects--California--Santa Clara Valley (Santa Clara County).
Public health.
Industrial hygiene--California--Santa Clara Valley (Santa Clara County).
Industrial hygiene.
Work--Health aspects--California--Santa Clara Valley (Santa Clara County).
Work.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (286 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, c2010.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
As the great American work-benefit experiment erodes, companies are increasingly asking people to take responsibility for managing their own health. There's no question work and health are intertwined. But what effect does an intensely productive, globally connected, high-tech work environment have on a population largely entrusted with overseeing their own health needs? In California's Silicon Valley, a distinctive and medically diverse health culture has emerged. Being and Well-Being explores this health culture, detailing the biomedical, countercultural, and immigrant-based beliefs and practices that shape ideas about working, care-giving, and what it means to be healthy. As English-Lueck shows, the integration of workplace productivity with personal health has created national patterns of discrimination against those not in the productive mainstream, including the unemployed, retired, and chronically ill. But new ideas about work and health can clarify core American values, highlight emerging global trends, and provide a vital assessment of the evolution of our shared pursuit of well-being. While policymakers debate the possibilities for health insurance reform and government provisions, they overlook this lived experience. The shift of responsibility from organization to individual, a key feature of late capitalism, has significant implications. Individuals are supposed to be unfettered innovators at work, while managing the mundane details of their pensions and health plans. Workers are simultaneously responsible for work projects and for themselves as projects. Here, where work and health collide, in the front offices and on the warehouse floors, is one of the key ways in which people, in the guise of workers, feel capitalism.
Contents:
Embodying place
Wearable parts
In production
Gearing up
Structural failure
Tinkering with the future.
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [243]-263) and index.
ISBN:
9780804775793
0804775796
OCLC:
714569451

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