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Histories of Dirt: Media and Urban Life in Colonial and Postcolonial Lagos

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Stephanie Newell

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Abstract

In Histories of Dirt Stephanie Newell traces the ways in which urban spaces and urban dwellers come to be regarded as dirty, as exemplified in colonial and postcolonial Lagos. Newell conceives dirt as an interpretive category that facilitates moral, sanitary, economic, and aesthetic evaluations of other cultures under the rubric of uncleanliness. She examines a number of texts ranging from newspaper articles by elite Lagosians to colonial travel writing, public health films, and urban planning to show how understandings of dirt came to structure colonial governance. Seeing Lagosians as sources of contagion and dirt, British colonizers used racist ideologies and discourses of dirt to justify racial segregation and public health policies. Newell also explores possibilities for non-Eurocentric methods for identifying African urbanites’ own values and opinions by foregrounding the voices of contemporary Lagosians through interviews and focus groups in which their responses to public health issues reflect local aesthetic tastes and values. In excavating the shifting role of dirt in structuring social and political life in Lagos, Newell provides new understandings of colonial and postcolonial urban history in West Africa.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Newell S

Publication type: Authored Book

Publication status: Published

Year: 2019

Number of Pages: 272

Print publication date: 01/12/2019

Acceptance date: 15/08/2018

Publisher: Duke University Press

Place Published: Durham, North Carolina

Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item

ISBN: 9781478006435


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