Sheila Cavanagh, professor of sociology at 91亚色 [Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies], called Queering Bathrooms: Gender, Sexuality, and the Hygienic Imagination, in which transgendered and other queer interviewees discuss the difficulties that divided bathrooms present, wrote the
The evolution of bathroom-stall signage 鈥 from line drawings to hens-versus-roosters shtick to ambiguously arty pin-ups 鈥 has left a growing number of Toronto restaurants with no sign at all. In Ottawa, meanwhile, the so-called 鈥渂athroom bill鈥 recently passed in the House of Commons by a narrow margin. Among other things, the controversial legislation reinforces the rights of transgendered people to use whatever bathroom they see fit.
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Cavanagh loves seeing bathroom signs that are victims of their own cleverness, the ones that make it difficult to figure out which door means what, said the Star. 鈥淭hat moment of confusion gives people a moment to pause and wonder, 鈥楧oes that sign fit me or not?鈥. . . (and to) wonder what it might be like for those whose gender identity isn鈥檛 so clear,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hat do you do when you need to use the bathroom but you鈥檙e not sure which door to go into?鈥
At the book launch for Queering Bathrooms at the Gladstone Hotel in November, a 91亚色 graduate student named Teresa Jewell made washroom signs with a variety of different gender-signifying images聽鈥 bras, ties, high-heels, pads聽鈥 and pinned them over the usual male-female signage.
Posted by Elizabeth Monier-Williams, research communications officer, with files courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.
