Building heteronormativity: the social and material reconstruction of men's public toilets as spaces of heterosexuality

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    Abstract

    This paper concerns changes in the spatial structure of British public toilets for men over the last ten years from secluded, indistinctly public/private spaces towards open, largely public structures. It examines a number of past and present toilet spaces in the British city of Manchester using spatial syntax analysis to consider how spaces have been adapted and policed differently in order to reduce opportunities for sex between men. It considers how these changes relate to shifts in the legislative context and in planning and policing initiatives away from explicit homophobia towards policies of inclusion of certain sexual minorities. The paper concludes that the way in which inclusion and a post-homophobic context have been expressed through legislative changes and planning and policing initiatives in relation to public toilets has led to a more explicit heteronormalisation of public spaces. The discussion relates to current debates in cultural geography about the consequences of greater participation of sexual minorities in public and issues of surveillance, control and privacy in public spaces.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)307-325
    Number of pages19
    JournalSocial and Cultural Geography
    Volume11
    Issue number4
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

    Keywords

    • Public toilets, public sex, public space, heteronormativity, spatial syntax

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