For Customers Only: Public Bathrooms and the Making of American Inequality
Autor Bryant Simonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 sep 2026
Americans have nowhere to go. Nationwide, countless public spaces lack one crucial thing: bathrooms, never mind ones that are safe and functional. Yet in the past, political leaders celebrated the opening of public bathrooms with boisterous press conferences and showy ribbon-cutting ceremonies.
For Customers Only is the first book to tell the larger history of public bathrooms in the United States, a fascinating story characterized by persistent discrimination, squeamishness about unknown bodies, and disinvestment in public amenities. Acclaimed writer and historian Bryant Simon argues that restrooms aren’t only an architectural feature, but an emblem of control and inequality. In the late nineteenth century, cities vied for the newest and biggest comfort stations to meet the demands of their bustling economies and accommodate a broad and growing public. They built restrooms with gold-domed entrances and ornamented stall doors to inspire cleanliness and order.
But officials soon grew anxious about who might take advantage of this privacy: gay men, the unhoused, and eventually drug users. And as the civil rights movement challenged segregation, officials in the north and south closed public toilets rather than integrate them. By the end of the twentieth century, only people with means could use private bathrooms while out and about—provided they made a purchase at a business. Today, as the fights over trans rights reveal, bathroom access remains a flash point across the country. Meanwhile, some municipalities are again calling for widely available public toilets, but as a tool for economic revitalization, not a public necessity.
The political and cultural history of a squirm-inducing subject, For Customers Only reveals the real and symbolic power of the most ordinary of things. Bathrooms, Simon shows, have always reflected our fragmented national values. Whether these spaces will ever become more accessible and inclusive is ultimately up to us.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226835181
ISBN-10: 0226835189
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 20 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 0226835189
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 20 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
Bryant Simon is the Laura H. Carnell Professor of History and the academic chair of the honors program at Temple University. He is the author most recently of The Hamlet Fire: The Tragic Story of Cheap Food, Cheap Government, and Cheap Lives, as well as Everything but the Coffee: Learning about America from Starbucks. He is a regular guest on the History Channel and a contributor to outlets like the New York Daily News, Washington Post, and Philadelphia Inquirer. Simon splits his time between Philadelphia and the Jersey Shore.
Cuprins
Introduction. Bodies, Maps, and Inequality
1. At Home, in Private
2. Building an Infrastructure of Privacy
3. Misbehaving
4. Killers and Closings
5. Jim Crow: Ratcheting Up Inequality
6. Paying for Inequality
7. Outsourcing Everything
8. Protests and Backlashes
9. The Business of Reopening Public Bathrooms
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
1. At Home, in Private
2. Building an Infrastructure of Privacy
3. Misbehaving
4. Killers and Closings
5. Jim Crow: Ratcheting Up Inequality
6. Paying for Inequality
7. Outsourcing Everything
8. Protests and Backlashes
9. The Business of Reopening Public Bathrooms
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Recenzii
“Far more than just an engaging history of the public toilet, Simon’s book reveals that this humble technology has been used for over a century to amplify the inequalities in American life. Simon traces the restriction of restroom access as a method—sometimes deliberately cruel—of humiliating the powerless. He offers vivid anecdotes about racial segregation, the denial of bodily privacy for the poor, anti-gay vice raids, the gendered denial of ‘potty parity,’ and the current battles over transgender access—as well as stories about brave individuals who challenged the status quo. For Customers Only suggests that inequality can be felt most painfully within the human body itself.”
“For Customers Only is a vivid and engaging history of public restrooms in the United States, tracing their rise as proud markers of modern life to their steady disappearance from the civic landscape. Simon shows how disinvestment, privatization, and policies shaped by race, gender, and sexuality turned these essential spaces into flashpoints of fear, surveillance, and exclusion. At once incisive and accessible, the book reveals how something as ordinary as a restroom illuminates the deeper inequalities embedded in American public life.”
“For Customers Only is a vivid and engaging history of public restrooms in the United States, tracing their rise as proud markers of modern life to their steady disappearance from the civic landscape. Simon shows how disinvestment, privatization, and policies shaped by race, gender, and sexuality turned these essential spaces into flashpoints of fear, surveillance, and exclusion. At once incisive and accessible, the book reveals how something as ordinary as a restroom illuminates the deeper inequalities embedded in American public life.”