Download PDF The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg
Be the very first to download this publication The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg as well as let reviewed by finish. It is extremely easy to read this book The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg because you do not need to bring this printed The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg anywhere. Your soft data e-book can be in our device or computer so you could delight in reading everywhere and also every time if needed. This is why great deals numbers of people likewise review the publications The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg in soft fie by downloading guide. So, be just one of them which take all advantages of checking out guide The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg by online or on your soft data system.

The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg

Download PDF The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg
The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg Actually, publication is truly a window to the world. Also many individuals may not such as checking out books; guides will constantly give the exact info regarding fact, fiction, experience, journey, politic, religion, and also much more. We are below a website that provides compilations of publications more than the book shop. Why? We give you bunches of numbers of connect to obtain guide The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg On is as you require this The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg You could find this publication conveniently here.
This letter might not affect you to be smarter, but guide The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg that we provide will certainly stimulate you to be smarter. Yeah, at least you'll understand more than others which don't. This is what called as the quality life improvisation. Why ought to this The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg It's considering that this is your favourite theme to check out. If you similar to this The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg motif about, why don't you read the book The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg to improve your conversation?
Today book The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg we offer right here is not kind of normal book. You understand, checking out currently doesn't indicate to take care of the printed book The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg in your hand. You can obtain the soft data of The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg in your gadget. Well, we indicate that the book that we proffer is the soft data of guide The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg The content and all things are same. The difference is just the forms of guide The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg, whereas, this problem will exactly pay.
We discuss you likewise the way to get this book The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg without going to the book establishment. You can remain to see the web link that we offer and ready to download The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg When lots of people are busy to seek fro in guide shop, you are extremely easy to download the The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg here. So, exactly what else you will choose? Take the inspiration right here! It is not only offering the right book The Dirt On Clean: An Unsanitized History, By Katherine Ashenburg but also the best book collections. Below we always offer you the best and most convenient method.

The question of cleanliness is one every age and culture has answered with confidence. For the first-century Roman, being clean meant a two-hour soak in baths of various temperatures, scraping the body with a miniature rake, and a final application of oil. For the aristocratic Frenchman in the seventeenth century, it meant changing your shirt once a day and perhaps going so far as to dip your hands in some water. Did Napoleon know something we didn't when he wrote to Josephine, "I will return in five days. Stop washing"? And why is the German term Warmduscher―a man who washes in warm or hot water―invariably a slight against his masculinity? Katherine Ashenburg takes on such fascinating questions as these in The Dirt on Clean, her charming tour of attitudes toward hygiene through time. An engrossing fusion of erudition and anecdote, The Dirt on Clean considers the bizarre prescriptions of history's doctors, the hygienic peccadilloes of great authors, and the historic twists and turns that have brought us to a place Ashenburg considers hedonistic yet oversanitized.
- Sales Rank: #161743 in Books
- Published on: 2008-10-28
- Released on: 2008-10-28
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.00" h x .82" w x 6.00" l, 1.20 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 368 pages
From Publishers Weekly
According to Ashenburg (The Mourner's Dance), the Western notion of cleanliness is a complex cultural creation that is constantly evolving, from Homer's well-washed Odysseus, who bathes before and after each of his colorful journeys, to Shaw's Eliza Doolittle, who screams in terror during her first hot bath. The ancient Romans considered cleanliness a social virtue, and Jews practiced ritual purity laws involving immersion in water. Abandoning Jewish practice, early Christians viewed bathing as a form of hedonism; they embraced saints like Godric, who, to mortify the flesh, walked from England to Jerusalem without washing or changing his clothes. Yet the Crusaders imported communal Turkish baths to medieval Europe. From the 14th to 18th centuries, kings and peasants shunned water because they thought it spread bubonic plague, and Louis XIV cleaned up by donning a fresh linen shirt. Americans, writes Ashenburg, were as filthy as their European cousins before the Civil War, but the Union's success in controlling disease through hygiene convinced its citizens that cleanliness was progressive and patriotic. Brimming with lively anecdotes, this well-researched, smartly paced and endearing history of Western cleanliness holds a welcome mirror up to our intimate selves, revealing deep-seated desires and fears spanning 2000-plus years. 82 b&w illus. (Nov. 15)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From School Library Journal
Adult/High School—This is a fascinating examination of the changing notions of what it means to be clean, and how those concepts fit into the worldview of different societies. The book is especially valuable for exploring the daily lives of people in past societies, but also for providing perspective on our attitudes toward ourselves, our bodies, and our world. It begins with the communal baths of the Greeks and Romans and explores the religious and ritual aspects of bathing, including Christian baptism. The public bath returned with the Crusaders, who brought the custom back to Europe in the form of the Turkish bath. With the plague and fears of communicable diseases, people avoided water-which they feared made the body vulnerable-in favor of linen cloth, which could be changed regularly, in lieu of bathing. Fear of immersing the body in water continued into the 20th century. Ashenburg, who uses interesting quotes from contemporaries to illustrate her history, speculates that in the future, when water shortages dictate new concepts of cleanliness, our own day may be seen as an age of excessive bathing and deodorizing.—Tom Holmes, King Middle School, Berkeley, CA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
“Brimming with lively anecdotes, this well-researched, smartly paced and endearing history of Western cleanliness holds a welcome mirror up to our intimate selves, revealing deep-seated desires and fears spanning 2000-plus years.” ―Publishers Weekly
“Dozens of charming illustrations distinguish a book notable for its engaging design as well as its illuminating content.” ―Kirkus Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
117 of 119 people found the following review helpful.
A Sordid History
By Rob Hardy
Do you smell bad? If you are reading this, it's a sure thing that you are a resident of the 21st century, and it's probable that you also are a resident of a society that reinforces regular bathing and use of deodorizers, so the answer is probably no. But then, if you were living five hundred years ago, the answer would probably be no, too, although if we were somehow to time-machine someone from that time to our own, we would probably answer yes in his particular instance. Katherine Ashenburg says that cleanliness is relative, or in her words "clean is a moving target", in her surprising history of attitudes toward dirt and grooming, _The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History_ (North Point Press). In her introduction, she writes, "Even more than in the eye or the nose, cleanliness is in the mind of the beholder. Every culture defines it for itself, choosing what it sees as the perfect point between squalid and over-fastidious." She makes the point by citing cigarette smoke; only a few decades ago, airplanes and restaurants were full of it, and most people, even nonsmokers, hardly noticed, let alone complained. Now we pick up on the smell immediately and take offense. "The nose is adaptable and teachable," Ashenburg writes, and she backs up the assertion with plenty of historical evidence. Her book gives a peculiar social history, one not covered in most history books. It is wonderfully entertaining, even though much of it is uncomfortable reading, first because those other people were so much dirtier than ourselves and they didn't seem to mind it, and second because we have been sold by advertising on a hypercleanliness that is beyond anything that health or social fitness demands.
The Romans didn't use soap, though they liked soaking in public baths. The cleaning got done by oiling themselves up and using a special metal tool called a strigil to scrape off the oil and dirt. Social bathing was not something that fit into a Christian world view. "Many early saints embraced filth enthusiastically and ingeniously," says Ashenburg. The head of a convent in the fourth century warned her nuns, "A clean body and a clean dress mean an unclean soul." The Spanish Inquisition knew it was on the right track if an accused was "known to bathe," and Spanish confessors would not absolve those who washed regularly. There was an eventual turnaround for cities in which visitors could take the waters. Going to a spa was medical therapy, but eventually bathing was once again for getting clean. Advice books told people how to take baths for the best effect. It was nineteenth century America that took the lead in promoting personal hygiene. Ashenburg cites several reasons why this might be so, including having more room for bathrooms and the cleaning lessons of soldiers in the Civil War. Eventually, mild soaps from vegetable sources (like palm and olive oil to make Palmolive, get it?) insinuated themselves into homes by means of advertising, a commercial endeavor about which Americans have always been enthusiastic.
The advertisers, however, were adept at creating and exploiting fears, subtly helping people to think "Everyone would like me more if I didn't smell bad." "Halitosis" was barely a medical term before Listerine let people know that their bad breath was keeping them from happy marriages and fine paychecks. Other firms harnessed women's fears to make a market for vaginal cleaners. Tooth whitening is now big business, even though dentists say the whiteners damage teeth and gums and anyway bright white is not the way healthy teeth naturally look. Our current level of fussing over bodily cleanliness does little for our mental security or our general health. Ashenburg notes at the end of the book that we have come full circle, for modern science from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has anointed simple handwashing as "the single most important means of preventing the spread of infection." Homeric heroes and medieval knights didn't have the science, but they knew that handwashing was a good practice. However, there is little basis for our jumping in with germicidal soaps, which are another aspect of our overcleaning mania. There are serious scientific proposals that cleaning up too much may mean that our immune systems don't get enough exercise to do their job efficiently. _The Dirt on Clean_, with plenty of humor, quotations from centuries of scrubbing or lack thereof, and many illustrations, shows that humans continue to bumble their way into hygiene, whatever the fashionable definition of that might turn out to be.
46 of 46 people found the following review helpful.
A super read.....
By Robert Busko
Katherine Asheburg's The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History is perhaps the best read in 2007. Ashenburg's sense of irony as she delves into the meaning of clean comes across clearly to the reader. I'm not sure Ashenburg intended to be as humorous as she is or whether this sense of irony is what drives the humor, but I found myself smiling throughout the book.
One of the biggest recommendations I can make is to those who teach marketing. It doesn't matter at what level, community college, junior college, or university. If you talk about advertising, product segmentation, target marketing, this is a must read.
I also enjoyed Ashenburg's idea that cleanliness is a moving target. Clean is, in fact, relative. My parents only bathed weekly, as did I and my brother. We're products of the 50's and the Saturday evening bath whether you needed it or not. This fact grosses out my two daughters, products of the 70's and 80's. Of course, they take their twice daily showers that last at least 20 minutes. The problem was so severe that the paint constantly pealed from the woodwork due to exposure to excessive moisture. The point being in just one generation, the definition of cleanliness has shifted and shifted radically.
The Dirt on Clean is loaded with examples pulled from throughout history. Much of western civilizations attitudes toward bathing is owed to our Arab brothers as is using a fork and washing of hands before eating. This is another ironic twist to me.
The Dirt on Clean will be an interesting read on any one who loves to watch our society evolve and change.
Highly recommended.
66 of 69 people found the following review helpful.
too clean
By Annabella
I'm a little disappointed in this book. It's ... too clean. It discusses in detail the number of bathhouses in different centuries, different countries - who cares? I wanted to know the dirty details of people's everyday lives. Some of the things I've always wondered about are - how did frontier pioneers keep eight babies in a succession clean without running water? What did women do during their periods when they didn't even wear underwear? Which creatures lived in Mme Pompadour's towering hair? What were the health effects on years of dirtiness - rashes? bad skin? What are the teeth like if they are not brushed for decades? How old were people when they started loosing their teeth? What was used instead of toilet paper? How did the city streets smell when the chamber pots were emptied there? How did a complete lack of privacy in slums or on a trail affect relationships?
These were some of the things I was hoping to learn about, as they are not often discussed in history books. But none of these was described. This is an informative book (just wasn't for me).
See all 51 customer reviews...
The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg PDF
The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg EPub
The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg Doc
The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg iBooks
The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg rtf
The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg Mobipocket
The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg Kindle
[Y109.Ebook] Download PDF The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg Doc
[Y109.Ebook] Download PDF The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg Doc
[Y109.Ebook] Download PDF The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg Doc
[Y109.Ebook] Download PDF The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History, by Katherine Ashenburg Doc