Employment and production in the Appalachian coal industry have plummeted over recent decades. But the lethal black lung disease, once thought to be near-eliminated, affects miners at rates never before recorded.
Digging Our Own Graves sets this epidemic in the context of the brutal assault, begun in the 1980s and continued since, on the United Mine Workers of America and the collective power of rank-and-file coal miners in the heart of the Appalachian coalfields. This destruction of militancy and working class power reveals the unacknowledged social and political roots of a health crisis that is still barely acknowledged by the state and coal industry.
Barbara Ellen Smith’s essential study, now with an updated introduction and conclusion, charts the struggles of miners and their families from the birth of the Black Lung Movement in 1968 to the present-day importance of demands for environmental justice through proposals like the Green New Deal. Through extensive interviews with participants and her own experiences as an activist, the author provides a vivid portrait of communities struggling for survival against the corporate extraction of labor, mineral wealth, and the very breath of those it sends to dig their own graves.
Содержание
Introduction
Chapter One:Whose Body?
Chapter Two: The Antiseptic Physician
Chapter Three: Where Is the Disease?
Chapter Four: The Contagious Spread of Rebellion
Chapter Five: Resistance to Disease
Chapter Six: Carry It On
Chapter Seven: Black Lung and the Politics of Union Reform
Chapter Eight: When the Bills Come Due
Conclusion
Об авторе
Barbara Ellen Smith is professor of women’s and gender studies at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.