
The fluorspar mines of Newfoundland take a heavy toll in human life. And the tragedy there is repeated around the world in mining and other industries, unrecognized, ignored, denied, covered up - or dulled and made distant by neat columns of impersonal statistics. But Dying Hard doesn't use statistics. Instead, it presents ten unembellished accounts of individual agony, poverty and physical ruin - ten stories that could be ten thousand and that owe their gruesome reality to the appalling, almost criminal irresponsibility of modern corporate industry and the blind indifference of modern legislation. Stark simplicity and raw emotional impact endow these accounts with a nearly poetic eloquence that can only stoke the fires of outrage they are sure to spark. Exerting an overpowering hold on the reader that is rare in any kind of book, Dying Hard is a shocking and indignant challenge to the conscience and humanity not just of Canada but of all nations, an outraged cry of protest and concern on behalf of workers victimized alike throughout the modern world.
This work investigates the systemic human cost of industrial negligence by examining the lives of workers afflicted by occupational diseases in the fluorspar mines of Newfoundland. Elliott Leyton, a sociologist, utilizes qualitative research and personal testimony to challenge the clinical detachment of corporate and government reporting. By focusing on individual narratives rather than aggregate data, the author argues that industrial carnage is a pervasive, ignored crisis that demands immediate legislative and ethical reform.
What You Will Find
Experts and readers recognize this text as a significant contribution to the sociology of labor and industrial health. The prose is noted for its stark, direct approach, which effectively forces a confrontation with the human consequences of corporate policy.
Page Count:
142
Publication Date:
1975-02-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195413032
ISBN-13:
9780195413038
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