This article seeks to demonstrate that the economic rationalization in health that characterizes the present, although possessing unique features, is inscribed within a longer historical process. Between 1900 and 1955, an "economic analytics" of the relationship between health and work was developed in Argentina, structured around the following focal points: reflections on the "price of a man"; thought that framed social medicine within the "human economy" program; the discourse of healthful and efficient living; the calculations of factory doctors and the conformation of an economic and utilitarian discourse within occupational medicine; and, finally, debates on productivity. These five central concepts define the emergence of a particular problematization regarding worker health and, in turn, raise questions about the relationship between capitalism, liberalism and biopower in occidental societies.
CITATION STYLE
Haidar, V. (2013). ¿Salud y productividad?: sobre la formación de una analítica “económica” de la relación salud-trabajo (Argentina, 1900-1955). Salud Colectiva, 9(2), 195. https://doi.org/10.18294/sc.2013.32
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