For the first-century Roman, being clean meant a public two-hour soak in baths of various temperatures, a scraping of the body with a miniature rake, and a final application of oil. For the seventeenth-century aristocratic Frenchman, it meant changing his shirt once a day, using perfume to obliterate both his own aroma and everyone else's, but ...
A Canadian journalist explores mourning customs and attitudes in the Western world. Triggered by the sudden death of her daughter's fiancé, Ashenburg's book compares the grief of her own family with the traditional mourning of other cultures and also in literature.
Winner of The Ontario Historical Society's Fred Landon Award for Best Regional History. With 300 photos and 11 maps. A work of unexpected delights and surprises: here is a one-of-a-kind guidebook that pinpoints the best of Ontario's architectural heritage in its most charming towns, offers tantalizing and informative details of provincial ...
Personal hygiene is something that only other people never seem to get quite right...Yet in this fascinating history of washing our bodies Katherine Ashenburg discovers that cleanliness exists above all in our minds: it is a cultural creation and a constant work in progress...Napoleon once wrote in a love letter to Josephine 'I return to Paris in ...
'I return to Paris in five days. Stop washing.' So wrote Napoleon to Josephine in an age when body odour was considered an aphrodisiac. In stark contrast, the Romans used to bath for hours each day. Ashenburg's investigation of history's ambivalence towards personal hygiene takes her through plague-ridden streets, hospitals and battlefields. From ...
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