Bathroom Battlegrounds: How Public Restrooms Shape the Gender Order

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Univ of California Press, Jan 28, 2020 - Social Science - 320 pages
Today’s debates about transgender inclusion and public restrooms may seem unmistakably contemporary, but they have a surprisingly long and storied history in the United States—one that concerns more than mere “potty politics.” Alexander K. Davis takes readers behind the scenes of two hundred years’ worth of conflicts over the existence, separation, and equity of gendered public restrooms, documenting at each step how bathrooms have been entangled with bigger cultural matters: the importance of the public good, the reach of institutional inclusion, the nature of gender difference, and, above all, the myriad privileges of social status. Chronicling the debut of nineteenth-century “comfort stations,” twentieth-century mandates requiring equal-but-separate men’s and women’s rooms, and twenty-first-century uproar over laws like North Carolina’s “bathroom bill,” Davis reveals how public restrooms are far from marginal or unimportant social spaces. Instead, they are—and always have been—consequential sites in which ideology, institutions, and inequality collide.
 

Contents

Politicizing the Potty
25
Professionalizing Plumbing
51
Regulating Restrooms
79
Working against the Washroom
107
Leveraging the Loo
135
Transforming the Toilet
162
Conclusion
188
Data and Methodology
213
Bibliography
267
Index
297
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About the author (2020)

Alexander K. Davis is Lecturer at Princeton University, where he studies gender, sexuality, and social inequality through the lens of cultural and organizational sociology.

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