D I R T In memory of Dame Mary Douglas (1921–2007) D I R T New Geographies of Cleanliness and Contamination EDITED BY BEN CAMPKIN AND ROSIE COX Published in 2007 by I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd 6 Salem Road, London W2 4BU 175 Fifth Avenue, New York NY 10010 www.ibtauris.com In the United States of America and Canada distributed by Palgrave Macmillan a division of St Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York NY 10010 Copyright selection and editorial matter © 2007, Ben Campkin and Rosie Cox Copyright individual chapters © 2007, Johan Andersson, Lívia Barbosa, Alyson Brody, Ben Campkin, Rosie Cox, Paul Dobraszczyk, Elizabeth Dowler, Gareth Enticott, Pamela K. Gilbert, Lewis Holloway, Dominic Janes, Moya Kneafsey, Lydia Martens, David L. Pike, Bruce A. Scholten, Kyro Selket, Helena Tuomainen, Laura Venn, Paul Watt, Carol Wolkowitz The right of Ben Campkin and Rosie Cox to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by the author in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or any part thereof, may not be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. ISBN 978 1 84511 672 9 A full CIP record for this book is available from the British Library A full CIP record is available from the Library of Congress Library of Congress Catalog card: available Printed and bound in Great Britain by TJ International Ltd, Padstow, Cornwall from camera-ready copy copy-edited and typeset by Oxford Publishing Services, Oxford Contents Figures vii Acknowledgements ix Introduction: Materialities and Metaphors of Dirt and Cleanliness Ben Campkin and Rosie Cox 1 Section 1 Home: Domestic Dirt and Cleaning Introduction Rosie Cox 11 1. Linguistic Leakiness or Really Dirty? Dirt in Social Theory Carol Wolkowitz 15 2. Domestic Workers and Pollution in Brazil Lívia Barbosa 25 3. The Visible and the Invisible: (De)regulation in Contemporary Cleaning Practices Lydia Martens 34 4. Bring Home the Dead: Purity and Filth in Contemporary Funeral Homes Kyro Selket 49 Section 2 City and Suburb: Urban Dirt and Cleansing Introduction Ben Campkin 63 5. Degradation and Regeneration: Theories of Dirt and the Contemporary City Ben Campkin 68 6. From the Dirty City to the Spoiled Suburb Paul Watt 80 7. Dangers Lurking Everywhere: The Sex Offender as Pollution Pamela K. Gilbert 92 8. Hygiene Aesthetics on London’s Gay Scene: The Stigma of AIDS Johan Andersson 103 v CONTENTS 9. Spiritual Cleansing: Priests and Prostitutes in Early Victorian London Dominic Janes 113 10. Mapping Sewer Spaces in mid-Victorian London Paul Dobraszczyk 123 11. The Cinematic Sewer David L. Pike 138 Section 3 Country: Constructing Rural Dirt Introduction Rosie Cox 153 12. Dirt and Development: Alternative Modernities in Thailand Alyson Brody 156 13. Dirty Foods, Healthy Communities? Gareth Enticott 168 14. Dirty Vegetables: Connecting Consumers to the Growing of their Food Lewis Holloway, Laura Venn, Rosie Cox, Moya Kneafsey, Elizabeth Dowler, Helena Tuomainen 178 15. Dirty Cows: Perceptions of BSE/vCJD Bruce A. Scholten 189 Contributors 198 Notes 202 References 236 Index 257 vi Figures 13.1 Table showing socio-demographic characteristics of participating households. 36 14.1 Main funeral home, corner Willis and Aro Street, Wellington City. Reproduced courtesy of Lychgate Funeral Home (2006) http:// www.lychgate.co.nz/contact.aspx, (accessed 20 November 2006). 52 14.2 Beauchamp Funeral Home exterior, Kimbolton Road, Feilding; interior, Morris Street, Marton. Reproduced courtesy of Beauchamp Funeral Home (2006) http://www.beauchamp.co. nz/feilding.php (accessed 20 November 2006). 53 14.3 Plan of a typical funeral home. Credit: Tim Wray. 55 15.1 The Dirty House (2001–2002), Adjaye/Associates, Shoreditch, London. Photograph: Tim Wray (2007). 75 15.2 Clean up, Clerkenwell Green, London Architecture Biennale (2006), Matthew Lloyd Architects and ‘Moose’. Photograph: Ben Campkin 76 15.3 Clean up, Clerkenwell Green, London Architecture Biennale (2006), Matthew Lloyd Architects and ‘Moose’, detail. Photograph: Ben Campkin 77 18.1 Exterior, Rupert Street bar, Soho, London. Photograph: Johan Andersson (2007). 109 18.2 Interior, The Edge bar, Soho, London. Photograph: Johan Andersson (2007). 111 10.1 Extract from a map made by the Holborn and Finsbury Sewer Commission (1846). Reproduced courtesy of Thames Water plc. 127 10.2 Index to the map of London made for the Metropolitan Commissioners of Sewers (1850). Reproduced courtesy of the London Metropolitan Archives, Corporation of London. 128 10.3 Sheet 553 of the five-feet to one-mile Ordnance Survey of London (c.1849). Reproduced courtesy of the London Metropolitan Archives, Corporation of London. 129 vii FIGURES 10.4 Extract from Sheet 27 of the 12-inch Ordnance Survey index plan (1848–51). Reproduced courtesy of the London Metropolitan Archives, Corporation of London. 130 10.5 Page from Book 45, Westminster Levels, showing sewer information collected by the surveyor T. Bevan (1848). Reproduced courtesy of the London Metropolitan Archives, Corporation of London. 132 10.6 Extract from sheet 27 of the 12-inch Ordnance Survey index plan showing sewer overlays (c.1850). Reproduced courtesy of the London Metropolitan Archives, Corporation of London. 136 11.1 Jean Valjean seeks escape and redemption through the sewer in Les Misérables (1978) directed by Glenn Jordan. DVD frame enlargement. Lions Gate (2004). 141 11.2 Exploring the dark heart of the modern American city in Alligator (1980) directed by Lewis Teague. DVD frame enlargement. Atlas International (1990). 143 11.3 Cold war style mobilization in the storm drains of Los Angeles. DVD frame enlargement from Them! (1954) directed by Gordon Douglas. Warner Home Video (2002). 146 11.4 Trapped between a rock and a hard place: the end of the Warsaw Uprising, Kanal (1957) directed by Andrzej Wajda. DVD frame enlargement. Criterion (2005). 148 11.5 Berlin-Athens: the Belgrade sewers open up into an illicit tunnel network evidently spanning Europe, Underground (1995) directed by Emir Kusturica. DVD frame enlargement New Yorker Video (2003). 149 14.1 Dirty vegetables from a Waterland box. Photograph: James Barry. 184 viii Acknowledgements The editors would like to thank everyone who has made the production of this collection possible. A number of the chapters included were first presented at the Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting in Denver in 2005. Two sessions on ‘Geographies of dirt and purity’ were organized by Rosie Cox and Laura Venn who received support from the British Academy Overseas Conference Grant Scheme. We would like to thank the Architecture Research Fund of the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, for a grant to assist with costs related to the book’s production. We are particularly grateful to Jane Rendell for her advice and support for this project. Our thanks also go to David Stonestreet and Jayne Hill at I.B.Tauris and Selina and Jason Cohen at Oxford Publishing Services for their contributions to the book’s editing and production. ix