"Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === During the late 1960s and early 1970s, the polluted Great Lakes became a central focus of the North American environmental movement. A majority of this pollution stemmed from phosphate-based laundry detergent use, which had become the...

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Main Author: Scherber, Annette Mary
Other Authors: Scarpino, Philip V.
Language:en_US
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/17815
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-178152019-05-10T15:21:57Z "Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974 Scherber, Annette Mary Scarpino, Philip V. Shrum, Rebecca K. Robertson, Nancy Marie Environmental History Women's History Gender Consumer Activism Environmental Movement Great Lakes Detergent Eutrophication Anthropocene Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) During the late 1960s and early 1970s, the polluted Great Lakes became a central focus of the North American environmental movement. A majority of this pollution stemmed from phosphate-based laundry detergent use, which had become the primary product households used to wash fabrics after World War II. The large volume of phosphorus in these detergents discharged into the lakes caused excess growths of algae to form in waterways, which turned green and smelly. As the algae died off, it reduced the oxygen in the water, making it less habitable for fish and other aquatic life, a process known as eutrophication. As primary consumers of laundry detergents during the time period, women, particularly white, middle-class housewives in the United States and Canada, became involved in state/provincial, national, and international discussions involving ecology, water pollution, and sewage treatment alongside scientists, politicians, and government officials. Their work as volunteers, activists, and lobbyists influencing the debate and ensuing policies on how best to abate this type of pollution, known as eutrophication, has often been ignored. This thesis recognizes the work women completed encouraging the enactment of key water quality regulations and popularizing the basic tenets of environmentally-conscious consumption practices during the environmental movement in the early 1970s. 2018-11-21T16:48:23Z 2018-11-21T16:48:23Z 2018-08 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/17815 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Environmental History
Women's History
Gender
Consumer Activism
Environmental Movement
Great Lakes
Detergent
Eutrophication
Anthropocene
spellingShingle Environmental History
Women's History
Gender
Consumer Activism
Environmental Movement
Great Lakes
Detergent
Eutrophication
Anthropocene
Scherber, Annette Mary
"Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === During the late 1960s and early 1970s, the polluted Great Lakes became a central focus of the North American environmental movement. A majority of this pollution stemmed from phosphate-based laundry detergent use, which had become the primary product households used to wash fabrics after World War II. The large volume of phosphorus in these detergents discharged into the lakes caused excess growths of algae to form in waterways, which turned green and smelly. As the algae died off, it reduced the oxygen in the water, making it less habitable for fish and other aquatic life, a process known as eutrophication. As primary consumers of laundry detergents during the time period, women, particularly white, middle-class housewives in the United States and Canada, became involved in state/provincial, national, and international discussions involving ecology, water pollution, and sewage treatment alongside scientists, politicians, and government officials. Their work as volunteers, activists, and lobbyists influencing the debate and ensuing policies on how best to abate this type of pollution, known as eutrophication, has often been ignored. This thesis recognizes the work women completed encouraging the enactment of key water quality regulations and popularizing the basic tenets of environmentally-conscious consumption practices during the environmental movement in the early 1970s.
author2 Scarpino, Philip V.
author_facet Scarpino, Philip V.
Scherber, Annette Mary
author Scherber, Annette Mary
author_sort Scherber, Annette Mary
title "Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974
title_short "Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974
title_full "Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974
title_fullStr "Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974
title_full_unstemmed "Clean Clothes vs. Clean Water": Consumer Activism, Gender, and the Fight to Clean Up the Great Lakes, 1965-1974
title_sort "clean clothes vs. clean water": consumer activism, gender, and the fight to clean up the great lakes, 1965-1974
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/17815
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