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37 Yale L. & Pol'y Rev. 227 (2018-2019)
Sexism in the Bathroom Debates: How Bathrooms Really Became Separated by Sex

handle is hein.journals/yalpr37 and id is 239 raw text is: 










             YALE LAW & POLICY REVIEW



             Sexism   in the  Bathroom Debates:
     How   Bathrooms Really Became Separated by Sex

                          W  Burlette Carter*


    This Article challenges two widely-embraced   theories about how
public intimate spaces (e.g, toilets, locker rooms, showers, etc. hereinafter
called bathrooms') first became separated by sex. The first challenged
theory  claims that the very first instance of sex-separation in public
bathrooms  occurred in 1739 at a ball held at a restaurant in Paris. Under
this first view, sex-separation first emerged as a sign of upper-class
gentility and elitism. The  second  challenged theory  argues  that a
consistent practice of differentiating bathrooms by sex did not emerge
until the late nineteenth century. According to this view, bathroom sex-
separation was imposed when  authorities overreacted to the notion of the
intermingling of the sexes as women entered the workplace  during the
Industrial Revolution. Thus, the second view holds that bathroom sex-
separation is rooted  in sexism, paternalism, and  outdated  Victorian
notions ofmodesty
    This Article argues that both of these theories are wrong. With respect
to the first theory, the author's research indicates that the ball in question
was not at a restaurant It was an invitation-only royal masquerade ball
for some 14,000 people. It was hosted by King Louis XV at the Hotel de
Ville in Paris to celebrate his daughter's wedding. Moreover, it was not the
first instance of sex-separation in bathrooms. That ball may, however,
evidence an attempt to extend heterosexually-centered bathroom norms
into spaces like the masquerades. The author argues that the masquerades


*@W. Burlette Carter, Professor Emeritus, The George Washington University Law
     School; J.D., Harvard Law School; B.A. Agnes Scott College. I thank former
     students Priom Ahmed, Halcyon Apy, Rebecca Krishnan-Ayer, Christopher
     Pefia, and Joseph Turman for their thoughtful contributions to this work. I
     also thank the editors of the Yale Law & PolicyReviewfor their efforts. The
     views and claims expressed herein are solely my own.


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