Dissident Gut: Technologies of Regularity, Politics of Revolt
By (Author) Jean Walton
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
10th April 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology
Gender studies: women and girls
Literary studies: general
Literary theory
Paperback
304
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Set against a backdrop of Marx's theory of how we "mediate, regulate, and control" our metabolic relation to nature, of the rise of a bourgeois faecal habitus, of the relegation of domestic waste management to female "meta-industrial" workers, of depleted agricultural fields and polluted urban centres, Dissident Gut performs three in-depth case studies of early twentieth-century English and European women whose wayward intestinal systems intervene in larger social, affective, and political networks, and who assert a peristaltic grammar of desire and resistance. Intervenes in theoretical discussions around the gut-brain axis, biopolitics and biopower, materialist feminism, psychoanalysis and hysteria, bodily habitus, and waste management.
A remarkable achievement of theoretical and archival rigour, this book changes how we understand the gendered regulation of bodies in the early twentieth century, fundamentally refiguring our sense of the biopolitical.
--Karl Schoonover, University of WarwickEncyclopaedically digesting medical historical, literary, psychoanalytic, social theoretical, economic and political materials, Walton offers a wonderfully rich and nourishing theory of metabolic processes, both within and beyond the human gut. Through brilliant close readings and careful broader conceptual work, Dissident Gut tracks the compelling ins and outs of the faecal biopolitics that run through modernity's management of time and space.
--Laura Salisbury, University of ExeterJean Walton is Professor Emerita of English at the University of Rhode Island. Her previous books include Mudflat Dreaming: Waterfront Battles and the Squatters Who Fought Them in 1970s Vancouver (2018); Buffalo Trace: A Threefold Vibration, co-authored with Mary Cappello and James Morrison (2018); and Fair Sex, Savage Dreams: Race, Psychoanalysis, Sexual Difference (2001).