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Histories of dirt : media and urban life in colonial and postcolonial Lagos

Title
Histories of dirt : media and urban life in colonial and postcolonial Lagos / Stephanie Newell.
ISBN
9781478005391
1478005394
9781478006435
1478006439
9781478007067
Publication
Durham : Duke University Press, 2020.
Copyright Notice Date
©2020
Physical Description
xix, 249 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Summary
"HISTORIES OF DIRT IN WEST AFRICA is a historical and cultural approach to the study of dirt in relation to public health, governance, and daily life in urban West Africa. While in the Anglophone world dirt is evoked to denote a problem, Stephanie Newell broadens dirt as an interpretive category to move beyond the fixation on purity and cleanliness to encompass understandings of, and interactions with, dirt as a dimension of urbanization. Newell thus situates her study of dirt between the failings of colonial interpretations of dirt and the multifaceted connotations of dirt in the West African context. Through archival work, she asserts that dirt structured colonial understandings of public health, which then gradually enabled a discourse through which hygiene policies under the British Annexation of Lagos were set--the same logic that enabled racial segregation in the name of public health. Newell reads the deep history of "sanitary salvation," or the set of related public health initiatives meant to enable clean and healthy colonial subjects, against present-day discussions concerning health, well-being, and daily life in West African cities.
Other formats
Online version: Newell, Stephanie, 1968- Histories of dirt. Durham : Duke University Press, 2020
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
September 15, 2022
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Histories of dirt
European insanitary nuisances
Malaria: lines in the dirt
African newspapers, the 'great unofficial public', and plague in Colonial Lagos
Screening dirt: public health movies in Colonial Nigeria and rural spectatorship in the 1930s and 1940s
Methods, unsound methods, no methods at all?
Popular perceptions of 'dirty' in multicultural Lagos
Remembering waste
City sexualities: negotiating homophobia
Mediated publics, uncontrollable audiences.
Citation

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