13/12/2019

The Clean Body : a History of Personal Hygiene Across the Western World








The twentieth century saw a wholesale transformation in popular hygiene throughout the Western world. The very concept of cleanliness itself was redefined. Routine washing and bathing habits replaced older, more intermittent practices, and customs once shared only by the few were adopted by the many.

At the fin de siècle frequent bathing had primarily been an upper-class affair; the rest took a full bath a few times a year at best. Otherwise they merely washed those parts in greatest need whenever the need arose, and in an age of few hygienic sensibilities those moments were few as well.

Half a century later the importance of personal cleanliness had become widely accepted, a truth beyond questioning. More people than ever bathed regularly and often, and their numbers continued to grow. The Saturday bath had become a commonplace ritual and daytime hand washing — before meals and after using the toilet, after rising and before bedtime — was routine. Those who hadn’t yet adopted these customs were a vanishing species, soon to disappear. The new cleanliness had become a mass phenomenon.

The bathroom left an indelible mark on the spread of these habits for it made regular washing and bathing simple tasks. Yet those who lacked its benefits didn’t necessarily neglect their hygiene. Even without permanent fixtures and private spaces, they made do in kitchens and sculleries with buckets and basins or whatever else was available. The new concepts of cleanliness were widely accepted long before everyone could practise them in their own bathroom, furnished with up-to-date fixtures and hot water at the turn of a tap.

Bathrooms changed the ease, more than the fact, of washing and bathing. As much as the bathroom fostered cleanliness, the new hygiene promoted the diffusion of the bathroom by creating a demand for its advantages.

Still, changes like these in everyday practices are difficult to document. However remarkable they may have seemed at the time, such commonplace matters are scarcely visible in retrospect. One early study, a 1937 survey in North London, found that 80 per cent of adults took a weekly bath, while another 10 per cent bathed twice or more; rates were higher still for children and adolescents. After a wartime inquiry into British housing conditions, the British social research organization Mass Observation noted that “broadly speaking, the pattern of washing bodies is a daily washing of the face and neck and a weekly washing of the whole body.” Informed by a later postwar survey, it reported:

      “Among the middle classes, women wash more frequently than men. In frequency of handwashing they outnumber men by three to two, in bathing by two to one. The daily bath is more likely to be a feminine ritual — 12 women in every 100 bathe daily compared with only one man in 100. In fact, the majority of men have only one bath weekly.”

Men and women alike wash their faces on average between once and twice daily, but their hands at least five times during the same period.

Not knowing how these surveys were conducted, we shouldn’t assume that they reflected British practices in general, but they do suggest that national habits had changed markedly since the beginning of the century.

The French evidence is even more limited. In 1951 the fashion magazine Elle asked a group of women about their personal care practices. Having recently returned from New York and been impressed by American ways, its feminist editor Françoise Giroud was concerned about her countrywomen’s seeming hygienic neglect.

Unfortunately the report mentioned nothing at all about how those surveyed were selected, nor even their numbers, so its findings are little more than straws in the wind. Half of those interviewed replied that they performed a daily “toilette complète,” while another third did so at least once a week. Giroud didn’t specify the elements of a toilette complète and it almost certainly included some body washing, though given the scarcity of bathrooms in France at the time, the number of immersion baths must have been small.

This, at least, was the meaning accepted by Jean Maudit, who revisited the original survey in 1986 in a review of French womanhood’s hygienic progress during the intervening 35 years. His methods, alas, were no more clear than Giroud’s, but by then three-quarters of those asked performed a toilette complète daily and most of the remainder did so two or three times a week. In a much broader inquiry, three enterprising journalists mounted an ambitious survey during the early 1970s, seeking to describe the moeurs [customs] of the entire French nation at home and at work.

While their interests were as broad as their survey techniques were unsound, they too gathered information on French cleanliness, finding that 13 per cent took a daily bath or shower and 23 per cent (most of them country dwellers) never took one at all. The latter statistic seemed to confirm long-standing views that the French paid little heed to their personal care.


The Elle inquiries, like those in England, seem to have relied largely on urban middle-class informants. But whatever their shortcomings and our methodological misgivings, they point to an obvious fact: some daily routines of personal cleanliness were already widely practised in France by the 1950s and their acceptance continued to grow during the second half of the century.

What Giroud overlooked in her concern for French hygienic standards was the fact that, though her countrywomen fell well short of the postwar New York example, they took greater care of their bodies than their mothers and grandmothers ever had. Like the British, the French were changing their hygienic ways. The range of habits varied in both countries and, especially in France, rural people still clung to older customs. But new hygiene routines were on the ascendant and in time would conquer all.

Despite their long-standing reputation for cleanliness, Americans have been strangely uncurious about their own bathing behaviour. One of the very few exceptions is a 1960 study of personal hygiene in California, the state with the highest proportion of homes with full bathrooms (95 per cent) in the nation at the time. This survey of 1,000 middle-class households in Los Angeles and district found that three-quarters of family members bathed daily while almost all the remainder did so two or three times a week. Slightly more than half of them took baths rather than showers.

But urban California was not the nation and middle-class California’s habits were not those of all Americans. This study surely reflected America at its cleanest.

Elsewhere routine bathing made further progress over time. Yet another study of hygiene habits, this one in Germany during the later 1960s, revealed bathing rates higher than those in France and England but well below those in California. Half the German respondents then took a weekly bath while another third did so at least two or three times a week. The great majority also washed their hands, faces and necks every morning. Yet one in 10 never bathed at all, though most of them must have scrubbed themselves regularly, for virtually all those surveyed washed their bodies, partly or fully, every day.

Over the next two decades, German habits changed still more dramatically. By the later 1980s more than half now showered daily and over 10 per cent did so more than once a day, all this in addition to a weekly bath. Small surveys done in France and Spain at the same time revealed an even more intense devotion to clean bodies. Three-quarters of French respondents took a bath at least once a week as well as a shower once daily — at minimum. The Spanish took to the tub less often but made up the difference in their commitment to a daily shower, taken by seven in eight of them.

Apart from a few surveys, we have little more than anecdotes to tell us about the changing customs of cleanliness, and they usually offer mere glimpses of personal experience. Overall they paint a picture much like the one we’ve just seen, of growing concern for personal hygiene, and of gradually spreading bathing and washing routines. The United States led the change but there, too, standards and practices varied across the continent.




Western European communities soon followed the American example, with France and Italy at the far end of the queue. Slower to adopt the bathroom and the new sanitary technologies, they were slower to embrace the new culture of cleanliness as well.

But by the end of the twentieth century the very concept of bodily cleanliness had been transformed everywhere in the transatlantic world. A survey by the French newspaper Le Figaro in 1998 made the point abundantly clear. It found that fewer than half of French adults took a daily bath or shower at a time when 70 to 80 per cent of northern Europeans already did so.

Leaving aside the discrepancies between this and earlier studies, the importance of the comment lay in how the newspaper defined cleanliness. When condemning its countrymen as hygienic laggards it used a late-twentieth-century measure. In a climate of ever more exacting standards, the only truly clean body had become one that was fully washed once a day.

Excerpted from The Clean Body : A Modern History.  Montreal, McGill-Queen’s University Press,  2019.


Cleaning Up the Masses: When Cleanliness Became a Phenomenon.  By Peter Ward . The Star, December  1, 2019. 



A publishing tradition as old as the printed word, advice literature flourished from the later 18th century onward, spurred by the spread of literacy, the declining cost of book publishing, an expanding middle class seeking guidance on right conduct, and the increasing numbers of self-declared experts keen to profit from the market for advice.

Self-help books circulated, and at the same time reflected, a wide variety of views about appropriate behavior. Before the mid-18th century they had little to say about how to accentuate feminine beauty and preserve it from time’s certainties. Rather, they viewed a woman’s attractions in relation to her conduct, placing them in a moral sphere rather than a physical setting.

A curious novel by a Parisian doctor published in 1754, however, departed from the usual offerings of the loveliness literature. Abdeker ou l’art de conserver la beauté, by Antoine Le Camus, purported to be the translation of an Arabic manuscript from the time of Mahomet II, the Ottoman Sultan who conquered Constantinople in 1453. It was a tale of illicit love between Abdeker, a young physician to the women of the Sultan’s harem, and Fatmé, an odalisque in his seraglio and a woman of unequaled sweetness and beauty. Time and again Abdeker gained access to the darkest  mysteries of the harem, to say nothing of the forbidden charms of the lovely Fatmé, by teaching her the means of preserving her beauty while instructing her in the arts of love.

Le Camus wrote in the Orientalist tradition of the erotic exotic. He was one among many Western observers of the Ottoman world fascinated by the image of the harem, with its imagined air of perfumed sensuality and sexual licence. His book was republished at least four times over the coming decades, was translated into English and Italian, and was still in circulation when Mozart’s Die Entführung aus dem Serail and Rossini’s Il Turco in Italia and L’Italiana in Algeri used the harem to comic effect. In the visual arts, Western painters—famously Ingres in his Grande Odalisque—returned time and again to the theme of the seraglio from the late 18th century onward.

The curiosity of the book, however, came neither from its romantic plot nor from its erotic overtones but from the fact that it offered feminine beauty tips on a broad range of subjects, bathing among them. Le Camus dotted his text with bits of practical wisdom about women’s health, offering handy summaries of his major points  at the end  of each of the book’s two parts. Here was a healthcare catechism with a difference!

His advice on bathing was set in the context of Abdekar’s visit to a bath in the harem, a luxurious setting rich with the promise of voluptuous delights. But the author’s suggestions about bathing were quite prosaic. One bathed to preserve a white skin and to cleanse it of dirt, for pleasure and politeness as well as for health. Bathing offered a host of natural benefits, Le Camus declared, yet one should proceed with caution because inconsiderate use could be the cause of major ills.

With its emphasis on a suggestive world of exquisite sensuality, Le Camus’s advice left the idea of such a bath in the realm of his reader’s imagination. For all but the most privileged Europeans of the time, even the remote  possibility of actually bathing in this manner was utterly out of reach. In this respect the author’s views on how to display and preserve feminine attractiveness were out of step with those offered by most other advisers of the later 18th century. The beauty counselors of the period had little to say about washing the body and much to say about a host of other matters: cosmetics, perfumes, hair care, and dress, to name a few.

But soon after the turn of the century, some of these self-appointed advisers—most of them  male—began to pay  more  attention to the role of bathing in women’s personal care. One of the first was Auguste Caron,  whose Toilette des dames ou Encyclopédie de la beauté, published in 1806 and later translated into English  and Italian, hymned the importance of cleanliness to women’s beauty. As the English edition explained,

   “there is in the toilette of women one very essential requisite, and which constitutes  its greatest merit in the eyes of the delicate man; I mean cleanliness. Cleanliness alone, unaccompanied by any other recommendation, has a right to please, to attract the eye, to gratify the taste, to excite desire; the toilette, without cleanliness, fails in its object; it displays only idle pretentions, bad taste and low sentiments. . . .Cleanliness is that precious quality which nearly transforms a woman into a divinity, by removing from her every thing that might betray the imperfections of human nature.”

In Caron’s view, careful attention to her personal  hygiene, of her body and its clothing, was the primary  means a woman  had to display  and  preserve  her  beauty. He advocated frequent bathing in warm water—never cold, which injured feminine loveliness—and even suggested that scented soaps might be used to cleanse the skin more perfectly. The face, hands, and feet should be washed regularly if bathing was not possible. Hair, however, was quite another matter. While Caron advised the same high standards for its cleanliness, he strongly criticized washing the head with water, which produced aches of the head, ears, and teeth, as well as eye complaints. Regular combing and the occasional application of hair powders or bran would keep it clean.

The 19th-century woman addressed by these authors could only be a lady of leisure. The frequent baths proposed by an anonymous Italian  author in 1827—at least once weekly and more often in the hot  season—should  take  at  least  one and  a half  hours, an opinion shared by Mme Celnart,  another mentor generous with her advice about  matters  feminine. A generation later Auguste Debay, the prolific and widely published French author of guides to hygiene (clothes, diet, beards, vocal organs, marriage, hands and feet, to name only some), suggested that baths  should probably last longer still. Obviously the woman imagined by these authors had time on her hands.



But of far greater significance, by the early decades of the 19th century the virtues of the bath had become indisputable, and from this point on it occupied a central place in the advice directed to women. As Debay claimed in 1846, the warm bath is essential to the cleanliness of the body, to the maintenance of its flexibility and freshness; one can consider it necessary for the general health of the individual.

But  whatever support bathing could muster  from the health and beauty guides, it also had to contend with misgivings and restrictions, for modesty challenged the spread of the bath throughout much of its long history. The Greco-Roman myth of the huntress Artemis (or Diana) and Actaeon was one of its early expressions, most widely known from the Renaissance onward through Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Tired from her day’s hunt, the chaste goddess Diana was surprised while bathing in a limpid forest pool, together with her attending nymphs. The male intruder was the mortal Actaeon, a hunter like herself, who blundered alone into her sacred grove at the end of his day’s pursuits. The nymphs tried, but failed, to cover Diana’s nakedness with their own and Actaeon saw her unclothed. In shame and anger she took revenge by depriving him of speech and turning him into a stag. Transformed, he took flight, but soon his hunting dogs took up the chase and, unable to cry out, he met his death at their jaws, avenging Diana’s wronged modesty.

The myth was a recurring theme in European painting from the 16th to the 18th centuries, with Titian, Rubens, and Rembrandt among the many artists drawn to various moments in the story. Some depicted Diana quietly bathing alone, others the goddess in her grotto surrounded by her attendants. Still others—notably Titian—portrayed the dramatic moment of Actaeon’s fatal glimpse and Diana is chilling response. But the thread running through them all was a sense of diffidence and reserve that surrounded the bathing female.

Excerpted from The Clean Body : A Modern History.  Montreal, McGill-Queen’s University Press,  2019.


How Cleanliness and Beauty Became Intertwined in the 18th Century. By Peter Ward. LitHub, December 11, 2019. 





You explain in the book that what first attracted you to the subject matter was an interview you had with your grandfather in the 1970s. Why did you find now was the right time to write and publish this particular book?

 The Clean Body is a synthesis. It draws together a literature in several languages from the past 3 centuries on many aspects of the history of personal hygiene across the western world.  The synthesis is a form of writing that sums up the major findings of research on a subject and explores its primary structures or patterns, commenting on its controversies and suggesting new pathways for inquiry.  By creating benchmarks and signposts, syntheses fulfill an important function in historical writing, particularly helpful because the field has become increasingly specialized since the mid 20th century.  Syntheses thus provide an opportunity to sum up and distil the understandings we have arrived at over time. 

 They also encourage academic historians to address wider, non-specialist audiences.  Though we tend to think of our scholarly colleagues as our most attentive readers, we also have a larger potential following among the book reading public, and it’s more easily reached through syntheses than through specialized works.  Historians are members of a shrinking minority within the university community that still has the capacity to communicate with the general reader, and I think we have a responsibility to do so.  A broadly shared sense of the past is an important feature of civil society.  In addition, through publishing for a more general audience we can help to link the reading public with our universities and colleges, where much historical research occurs. 

But writing a synthesis isn’t for everyone.  It’s an activity best suited to those who’ve laboured long in the vineyards of the past. Many years ago one of my colleagues, a fine economist whose late career interests drew him to economic history, remarked to me: “the trouble with history, Peter, is you have to know so much!”  And it’s true.  Historical knowledge and understanding are cumulative; it takes a long time to master a subject to the extent needed to write a mature synthesis.
  
For these several reasons, this was the right time to write The Clean Body.  Publishing a synthesis was an attractive possibility because no one had previously attempted to do so on such a broad scale, because the subject emerged from some of my long-standing academic interests and because, approaching retirement as I was, turning a longstanding a curiosity into a book seemed more important than ever. 

You used a variety of sources in your research, including ones in English, French, German and Italian. What were a few of the “Crown Jewels” or most valuable sources that you found?

As a synthesis The Clean Body is necessarily based on the work of others, in this case many others.  In the historian’s jargon, it relies principally on secondary rather than primary sources. Of them I found some of the major work of the French historians Alain Corbin, Georges Vigarello and Jean-Pierre Goubert foundational.  First published during the mid 1980s, and each in its own way, Corbin’s The Foul and the Fragrant: Odor and the French Social Imagination, Vigarello’s Concepts of Cleanliness: Changing Attitudes in France since the Middle Ages and Goubert’s The Conquest of Water: The Advent of Health in the Industrial Age broke conceptual ground by exploring the deeper cultural meanings of popular ideas and everyday practices.

 I also drew heavily on a rich literature written in Italian that’s not well known outside Italy.  In the English-speaking world, historical understandings of modern western Europe have long been shaped primarily by the British and French experiences, and in the French instance, often through works in translation, including those by Corbin, Vigarello and Goubert just noted.  For English speakers and readers in particular, most other European national histories remain to some extent in the shadows, in part because  of limited second language skills, in part because translated studies aren’t all that common.  Though I came late to Italian and I’d like to be more fluent than I am, I now have access to an large body of scholarship that hasn’t been as effectively integrated into western European historical narratives as I believe it should be, and I’ve attempted this task in The Clean Body.  I leave it to others to decide whether or not I’ve succeeded.

Why did you find it important to focus on both Europe and North America rather than one or the other?

To put it simply, I think wholes are more important than their parts.  One of the leading features of the making of modern societies has been a gradual convergence of technologies, systems, beliefs and understandings.  Despite the many national differences in the rich world today, most nations also hold many fundamentals in common; in many respects, as well, what they share is more important than what distinguishes them from each other.  To choose an obvious example, urban transportation systems across the western world have enough similarities that it’s possible for us to find our way around cities that we’ve never visited before.  Thus, considering western Europe and North America together was a way for me to focus on the most important features of the personal hygiene transition. 

At the same time, the panoramic view also highlights important distinctions.  The pathways to contemporary body care practices varied from one country to the next, and within individual countries as well, just as general conditions of material life among them differed.  In turn, these differences influenced the direction, the shape and the timing of the new hygiene’s progress.  Though the ultimate destination was common to all, the journey varied in important ways from one community to another, and the contrasts help to highlight some of the major cultural changes experienced en route.

 The Clean Body spans a vast time range. Why did you choose the time frame of four centuries? What would you say was the biggest change from then to now?


When planning this project I faced a choice between a survey that spanned the 2 millennia from the classical era to the present and one that emphasized the modern era, broadly defined. A lively and highly enjoyable popular history of bathing from Roman times to the recent past was published in 2007, and in my view it fulfills the first need very well.  At the same time, it is anecdotal, descriptive more than explanatory, and has much more to say about clean bodies than clean clothes, limitations that I’ve tried to overcome. 

I chose the tighter time frame – the past 4 centuries – because it was long enough to explore the slow diffusion of change in personal hygiene habits, and also because it let me emphasize contrasts between 19th and 20th century practices and those of earlier times. It also allowed me to address what I saw as a major omission in much of what has been published on the subject.  To me, most previous works seemed to lose energy with the arrival of the 20th century, as if the cleanliness revolution had run its course by the eve of World War I.  But this view misses an important part of the story because the transformation of body care habits has continued to our own time.  In particular, hygiene practices were democratized during the second half of the century, becoming a mass phenomenon. Meanwhile, beauty replaced hygiene as the main social imperative behind bathing and wearing clean clothes.




In the book you discuss how the idea of cleanliness as a social ideal rose with consumerism and the influence of advertising. Do you think Western cultures would have such a high standard for cleanliness today if we did not live in societies centred around consumerism?

Probably not – though I know that historians should always be wary when answering questions about what hasn’t happened.  After all, our habits have been exposed to the language of persuasion for well over a century and it’s been highly influential. But we should also be careful not to confuse current practices with high standards of cleanliness.  Many of today’s body care practices have little to do with being clean, even though they’re conducted in the name of cleanliness. In addition, the meaning of ‘clean’ has changed substantially over the past 4 centuries, especially after World War II.  Since then the concept of cleanliness has become deeply influenced, even absorbed, by the beauty care industry and the resulting conflation of beauty with cleanliness clouds the issue.

Were there any differences in your approach to The Clean Body than your other works such as White Canada Forever: Popular Attitudes and Public Policy toward Orientals in British Columbia; Courtship, Love and Marriage in Nineteenth-Century English Canada and Birth Weight and Economic Growth: Women’s Living Standards in the Industrializing West?

My major books have differed substantially from one another, both conceptually and methodologically.  The first, White Canada Forever, was a revision and extension of my doctoral thesis. History dissertations require the author to demonstrate a mastery of archival and secondary research on a novel topic and skill in writing a sustained work of historical analysis. In this respect my thesis, and the book that it led to, were no different from most that follow this trajectory.  I was interested in exploring the Canadian response to Asian immigration as an expression of popular racial attitudes and as a set of public policies that formalized racial discrimination.  The book was also an example of historical writing from a national perspective even though it focused primarily on the westernmost province in the country.  I relied primarily on national and provincial government records and newspaper sources for this project.

  In contrast, Courtship, Love and Marriage was an attempt to examine the history of family formation in 19th century Canada.  What interested me most was the interplay between the various structuralfeatures of the marriage market (religious beliefs, legal requirements, demographic and economic factors, courting customs) and growth of romantic intimacy within couples as they moved toward marriage.  In this case most of my research was done in family papers, especially diaries and letters.

In my third book, Birth Weight and Economic Growth, I went for a walk with the econometric historians, combining quantitative techniques with the tools and sources of the social historian.  The book rests on large samples of clinical data drawn from 19th and 20th century maternity hospital records in 5 European and North American cities.  The approach employs the basic statistical methods of the social sciences and is rigorously comparative.  My goal was to use a common biological marker of maternal and infant wellbeing to assess the impact of industrialization on women, whose welfare in the past had long been largely ignored.

What surprised you the most in your research and writing process?

Looking back over the course of the project, I’m struck by the length of time over which the personal hygiene revolution unfolded.  It took the better part of 2 centuries for the transformation to reach its conclusion. There were no great discoveries or sudden turning points in this process, just a slow evolution of understandings, practices, technologies and living standards.  Initially adopted by small groups of privileged people, these customs gradually touched the lives of greater and greater numbers as beliefs about body care evolved and changing circumstances made it easier to be clean. The central theme of this story has much less to do with innovation than with diffusion, the spread of habits across social as much as national boundaries and, in the end, their central place in fashioning the modern man and woman.

What do you most want readers to take away from The Clean Body?

Two things, one historical, one personal.  First the historical.  The Clean Body is a history of habits. It’s a history of the mundane, the everyday, a history without great events, great ideas and great actors.  Its chief importance lies in the fact that it deals with some of life’s most commonplace activities.  But commonplace doesn’t mean trivial.  Time use studies from the late 20th century suggest that, everywhere in the western world, most adults now devote about an hour every day to grooming themselves.  In these same countries households spend 5% or more of their annual incomes on personal hygiene.  And, at a national level, keeping clean accounts for roughly the same proportion of GDP.  So the history of the unremarkable and the ordinary have an importance of their own, one that can easily surpass the history of greatness in any of its many forms.

As to the personal, though I suspect the idea is rather passé, I’ve always considered historical writing a form of literature and good writing an essential part of the historian’s task.  By good I don’t mean florid or elaborate or preciously obscure.  I value clear, direct and lively writing because it communicates effectively.  And at its best it can also reveal a play of language that brings the reader an aesthetic pleasure quite apart from the formal meaning of the text.  I’d be delighted if The Clean Body pleased some readers in this way as well.



The History of Personal Hygiene: An Interview with Peter Ward. By  Aleisha Smith. History News Network ,  November 17, 2019.



































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