Remaking the John

The Invention and Reinvention of the Toilet

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Pub Date Aug 01 2014 | Archive Date Oct 31 2014
Lerner Publishing Group | Twenty-First Century Books ™

Description

Did you know that about 40 percent of the world's population lives without toilets? That's more than two billion people, most of whom live in rural areas or crowded urban slums. And according to the World Health Organization, diseases spread by the lack of basic sanitation kill more people every year than all forms of violence, including war. In particular, diarrheal diseases kill more than two million people each year, most of them children.

Everyone needs to go to the bathroom, and from the citizens of the world's earliest human settlements to astronauts living on the International Space Station, the challenge has been the same: how to safely and effectively dispose of human body wastes. Toilet history includes everything from the hunt for the causes of infectious disease to twenty-first-century marvels of engineering.

In Remaking the John, you'll explore the many ways people across the globe and through the ages have invented—and reinvented—the toilet. You will learn about everything from ancient Roman sewers to the world's first flush toilets. You'll also find out about the twenty-first-century Reinvent the Toilet Challenge—an engineering contest designed to spur creation of an ecologically friendly, water-saving, inexpensive, and sanitary toilet. And while you're at it, mark World Toilet Day on your calendar. Observed every November 19, this international day of action works to raise awareness about the modern world's many sanitation challenges.

Did you know that about 40 percent of the world's population lives without toilets? That's more than two billion people, most of whom live in rural areas or crowded urban slums. And according to the...


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ISBN 9781467726450
PRICE $34.65 (USD)

Average rating from 23 members


Featured Reviews

If there's one modern convenience we wouldn't want to live without, I think the flush toilet would have to be it. Sure, we love our refrigerators, TVs, microwaves, computers, cars, but the flush toilet has to rank above all of those. In fact, as Francesca Davis DiPiazza points out in her new book, Remaking the John: The Invention and Reinvention of the Toilet, indoor facilities are not only convenient, a 2007 survey of doctors concluded that of all medical advances since 1840, "toilets and sewers beat them all. The sanitary revolution won as the most important leap forward in health since 1840."

DiPiazza covers the history of toilets, or the lack of, beginning with the first indoor toilets in Skara Brae, in present-day Scotland, dating to about 5,000 years ago. As long as towns were small and most people lived in rural areas, holes in the ground, using water sources such as streams, rivers, and man-made ditches to carry the waste away worked out OK. But the more populations concentrated in cities, the more the waste accumulated and bred disease.

When addressing the reinvention of the toilet, DiPiazza describes various modern efforts to handle human waste in innovative ways. The toilets we use today have been basically unchanged for a century or more. But as populations grow, and water becomes more precious, some inventors are seeking ways to use less water in toilets. It's a little shocking how many people around the world still don't have access to toilets, using the same kinds of methods that our ancestors used hundreds of years ago. In order to spread the use of toilets and find new ways for toilets to function, groups like water.org, the World Toilet Organization, and the Reinvent the Toilet Challenge raise funding and cultivate ideas.

Remaking the John is brief, and is written in an accessible style, and, despite the subject matter, does not resort to potty humor. It can be easily read in one reading period at school, yet covers a lot of ground and offers suggestions for further reading. Remaking the John would be a perfect addition to any elementary school or junior high library.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the complimentary electronic review copy!

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This is an interesting book on the history of sanitation and toilets. I love the cover and wish there was more pictures throughout the book. That being said, I think it was very informative, and something that would keep many boys reading.

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