Bathroom
By (Author) Barbara Penner
Reaktion Books
Reaktion Books
3rd March 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
747.78
336
Width 208mm, Height 156mm
The story of the modern bathroom is bothone of grand feats of engineering and massproduction, and of the unremarkable,mundane and repressed. The most privateplace in the home, the bathroom is wherewe perform the most intimate of our dailyroutines; it is also a space where we takerefuge from the outside world. Yet themoment we turn on a tap or flush the toilet,the smallest room is hooked up to the largestof all infrastructural systems: a vast andcomplex network of pipes, pumps andtreatment plants.Bathroom charts the evolution of thebathroom and the habits and lifestyles towhich it gave rise. The book considers howand why the bathroom emerged and howit became an international symbol of keymodern values of cleanliness, order andprogress.
Winner of RIBA Presidents Award 2014 * Award *
Barbara Penners study of the bathroom likewise shows humankind to be, on the whole, bonkers about bathrooms. The ways that we wash and particularly, excrete owe little to rationality, and owe much to custom, nationality, and the interests of large-scale manufacturers . . . The design history was all very interesting, but Penner really gets going when she begins to explore issues of social justice. Following the footsteps of that admirable campaigner for public toilets, Clara Greed, she rightly argues that it's the loo, the room that we all have to visit, that tells you if you are welcome in a building or not . . . The best bits of the book really changed my mind about things I had held true. * Lucy Worsley, The Times *
For an investigation of how we evacuate and what we do with the results, this is a remarkably clean book . . . excellent . . . Where the body and technology meet, this immensely useful little volume points out, is exactly where we have to confront our most basic self-image, but we always do through an elaborate system that plugs that sense of our body into a network of implements and biases that are socially constructed. * Architectural Review *
Penners book is a model for design history. She digs deep into the economic and technological framework for the bathroom. She illuminates the evolution of style in relation to race, class, politics and sexuality. She uncovers fascinating images and commentary from primary sources, and she seeks out the heresies that challenged modern hygienes normative creed. She studies the innovators and the critics as well as the standard-bearers. Her book is an inspiration to other historians as well as to designers and architects looking for new solutions in a rapidly developing world whose infrastructure is not yet fixed in porcelain and PVC. * Journal of Design History *
a global and historical tour of toilets. Designed for discretion yet connected to an enormous public infrastructure, these tiny rooms reveal big ideas about gender, fashion, consumption, health, cleanliness, self-identity and, of course, plumbing. * Times Higher Education *
Amply illustrated, the book is a fascinating show-and-tell of artifact specificity . . . the work will be of keen interest to scholars because of the wealth of descriptive material it provides and the alertness to social practice, both proximate and historic. It is a book about the micro and the macro, the social and the material. Most obviously, Penner is pressing in on the world of design and architecture, contributing information about matters that need to be taken up in a direct way. This book is about common decency in the everyday as well as about life and death. * Technology and Culture *
Barbara Penner is Professor in Architectural Humanities at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. Her books include Bathroom (Reaktion, 2013) and she is a contributing editor of Places Journal.