Available Formats
A History of Hygiene in Modern France: The Threshold of Disgust
By (Author) Steven Zdatny
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
18th April 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Hygiene
613.40944
Hardback
328
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book tells the story of an epochal change in the human condition that was part of what is often thought of as modernization a process that remade culture and society in France in the 19th and 20th centuries. Hygiene, Steven Zdatny convincingly contends, was that change. He reflects on how the development of hygiene: changed the way people thought about and treated their bodies; put an end to age-old afflictions and brought comfort where discomfort had been the unavoidable companion of existence; and helped produce a tripling of life expectancy. The book considers how the evolution of hygiene produced a society where people washed often, changed their clothes every day, lived without lice and scabies, and performed their natural functions indoors. It reflects on developments in industrial plumbing, public education, government investment, the invention of new products to keep bodies and homes clean, and a parallel makeover in the expectations, sensibilities, and practices about what is proper and what is disgusting. These developments, the study reveals, were not steady and did not happen everywhere at the same pace. But in the fullness of time, they produced a revolution in the human condition.
Steven Zdatny is Professor of History at The University of Vermont, USA. He is the author of The Politics of Survival: Artisans in Twentieth-Century France (1990), Hairstyles and Fashion: A Hairdressers History of Paris, 1910-1920 (1999) and Fashion, Work, and Politics in Modern France (2006).