Description
This concise volume explores the surprisingly political history of bathroom access and exclusion in the United States. Sara Chatfield demonstrates how bathrooms have evolved from private, domestic spaces into contested public arenas where questions of gender, race, class, and citizenship are negotiated and enforced.
Through historical analysis, Chatfield traces how bathroom policies have been used to maintain social hierarchies and exclude marginalized groups, from segregated “colored” facilities during Jim Crow to contemporary debates over transgender bathroom access. The book examines how these seemingly mundane spaces reflect deeper anxieties about bodies, boundaries, and belonging in American society.
Part of the Elements in Gender and Politics series, this work provides essential context for understanding modern bathroom access debates and their connection to broader questions of civil rights, bodily autonomy, and political inclusion. It offers valuable insights for students, scholars, and anyone interested in gender studies, American history, and political theory.







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