Imprint:
The University of North Carolina PressISBN:
9781469663340Product Form:
PaperbackForm detail:
TradeAudience:
Professional/ScholarlyDimensions:
9.1in x 6.1 x 0.6 in | 320 grPage Count:
206 pages
An important and ambitious book that tackles a pervasive but little understood medical problem: chronic fatigue. Emily K. Abel offers a unique and creative blend of history, memoir, and contemporary medical knowledge, one that fills a glaring gap in the literature."—Susan Cahn, University at Buffalo
Emily Abel has written far more than 'an intimate history of fatigue.' She's written a cultural, social, political, economic, medical, business, gender, and labor history of fatigue as well. She skillfully and compellingly demonstrates that fatigue is a fascinating historical topic."—Jacqueline H. Wolf, author of Cesarean Section: An American History of Risk, Technology, and Consequence
This is quintessential Emily Abel: concise, deeply researched, thoughtful and nuanced in illuminating a long-misunderstood problem. It is also a thoroughly compelling read."—Janet Farrell Brodie, Claremont Graduate University
A personal story made more universal that many readers will be able to identify with, and a well-documented study of the history and current state of the science of fatigue." —Library Journal
A smart new book. . . . Abel's work stands out as one of the first to tackle the nature and representation of fatigue itself, presenting an absorbing, incisive cultural history." —Health Rising
"Sick and Tired is not just a medical history, but an account of capitalism and its physical and emotional consequences. These questions are particularly pressing now, as many organisations reconsider the post-pandemic workplace. . . . A convincing model for how to produce meaningful and politically engaged medical histories, stories that have only become more pertinent in the age of Covid-19." —History Today
Abel brings to light the importance of seeing fatigue as a distinct health condition necessitating direct intervention and empathy for people experiencing the condition." —CHOICE