In recent years, water shortages around the world have prompted calls to action, often directed toward the individual: take fewer and shorter showers, launder clothes less often. Increasingly, environmental crises may force us to reckon with our choices — our culture of consumption, unequal distribution of resources, and environmental destruction — but they also prompt us to rethink deeply ingrained ways of living, such as our hygienic practices.
Peter Ward would welcome this reflection. In The Clean Body: A Modern History, he promises to tell the story of the “cleanliness revolution,” offering cleanliness as a lens through which to view a society in transition, whether culturally, technologically, or scientifically.
As I began the book, though, I wondered if it would offer anything new. Writing compelling history, especially of the recent past, has its challenges. For one thing, there’s often little suspense. From our place in the present, we live...
Marisa Grizenko is the reviews editor for Event magazine.