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A ‘Discreet Dance’: technologies of menstrual management in Australian public toilets during the twentieth century

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 05:37 authored by Carla Pascoe LeahyCarla Pascoe Leahy
Across the twentieth century, the technologies available to Australian women for managing menstruation were transformed. Products for staunching blood flow changed from bulky, re-usable rags to ‘invisible’, disposable pads and tampons. Disposal facilities changed from the humble waste bin, through to incinerators, and eventually to specialised, antibacterial ‘sanitary disposal units’. The greatest impact of these shifts was felt in public toilets: places where women must deal with private bodily functions in semi-public, communal environments. Promotional materials for menstrual products and disposal facilities promised that use of their technologies would obviate age-old menstrual taboos, emancipating women from the anxiety and mortification long associated with menstruation. This paper draws upon oral histories to argue that by the close of the twentieth century the reverse was true. Increasingly efficacious and convenient menstrual products meant that Australian women could more convincingly maintain ‘menstrual etiquette’ by keeping their monthly bleeding almost completely concealed.

History

Publication title

Women'S History Review

Volume

24

Pagination

234-251

ISSN

0961-2025

Department/School

School of Humanities

Publisher

Triangle Journals Ltd

Place of publication

Po Box 65, Wallingford, England, Oxfordshire, Ox10 0Yg

Rights statement

Copyright 2014 Taylor & Francis

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Understanding Australia’s past

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    University Of Tasmania

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