What works
This was something I used to help me think through the two main axes that determine peeing behavior – biological and social control. Urination is a biological function that has been subjected to a great degree of social control. Unfortunately, urban design has not kept pace with the demand for clean, easily accessible public restrooms for humans. And there has been no attempt to create any kind of system to deal with canine urine. In most cities it is illegal for humans to pee in public but both legal and widely accepted for dogs to pee where ever they like (in New York, they cannot pee on the grass in parks).
What worked about this as a graphic is that it helped me sort out how I was thinking about the problem of access to the city when the bladder is a leash. I couldn’t quite sort out how to think about what it means that some public peeing is acceptable even though it is mostly completely unacceptable. One of the odd side effects of the introduction of the new TSA pat down procedures is that it revealed just how many people struggle with incontinence, either needing to urinate frequently or needing to wear diapers (or both). I was aware of those issues before the TSA started sticking their hands in private places, but I wasn’t sure how to simultaneously think about adult diapers, dogs peeing on the street, and taxi/truck drivers peeing in jugs while still in their cabs. Where social control is very strong – as it is in the case of urination – it can almost trump biological needs, especially if the biological needs offer a level of control. Clearly, not all peeing can be put under biological control, but a good deal of it can. I stuck vomiting on the map since that is harder to control than peeing and it was useful to include a biological drive that has not been so easy to tame with the civilizing process.
What needs work
The glaring problem here is the ‘who cares’ problem. Very few care about the axes of social and biological control, though there are a few other case types that could use these axes (burping/farting, posture, chewing, etc). But the re-use of this exact same set of axes is not the point. Nor do I particularly care if you are interested in public peeing.
I introduced this graphic because it was helpful to me in thinking through the analysis of a multi-faceted problem. All social science problems are multi-faceted. Setting up four quadrants as a field is superior to setting up four quadrants in a two by two table, though that is a variant of this approach. I find that approach is too reductive, forcing things to be lumped together that really are not all that similar. In this case, I was able to add more nuance by leaving the mid-section of the biological control vector unmarked while I singled out incontinence and retention (where retention is beyond routine continence).
This approach to thinking through forces you to come up with the two critical dimensions that organize both the empirical information you’ve gathered and the theoretical arc you would like to follow. If you are skilled, you could add a third dimension. A 2×2 table only gives you boxes, not spectrums. What’s more, the spectrum approach is more open, allowing the addition of further segmentation or layering which is not as easy to achieve in a 2×2 table.
Comments 13
Meera — December 5, 2010
Interesting, and things which really do need to be addressed in relation to laws, security(-theatre) practices, and social norms.
Two points, though -- 1. I think you mean 'urostomy' bag, not colostomy; 2. I'm not sure what 'tampons' are doing here, as they have nothing to do with the orifice involved in urination.
Axes of peeing in public — December 8, 2010
[...] think this is a joke, but this is serious business. From Laura Noren, a PhD candidate in sociology, the axes of public peeing: This was something I used to help me think through the two main axes that determine peeing [...]
Peeing in Public: an analysis « Microwave Burrito — December 10, 2010
[...] analysis here. Filed under Madness ← Best Google Streetview Sightings LikeBe the first to like [...]
Mike — December 10, 2010
I was in Delhi last year (reading the Delhi Times) and there was a editorial regarding how the fine for owners letting their canines pee on the street was twice (or more times... I forget) the fine for humans who deep!
Tinkle trouble? Help from the Axes of Public Peeing [Graphic] | The Universe... All things technology, web 2.0, and social media — December 10, 2010
[...] Thankfully, Laura Noren, a PhD candidate in sociology, has developed the “Axes of Public Peeing. “ [...]
JITC — December 19, 2010
I echo Meera. What in the world are Tampons doing on this chart?
The Axes of Public Peeing – a Novel Way to Look at an Old Issue | Green Agenda — December 21, 2010
[...] Image credit: Laura Norén (the full image is available on The Society Pages) [...]
How Green Is A Quick Wee In Public? | Green Prophet — December 22, 2010
[...] to The Axes of Public Peeing designed by Laura Norén, incontinent people would rather stuff pads in their pants or hold their [...]
bg — January 23, 2011
while the bag may be freeing as far as bladder is concerned limping due to pain seems hardly biologically liberated. (as well as terror of everything pulling)
I'd put the relative liberation about here
<--- on your chart
GOP candidates for President – Mapping the field » Graphic Sociology — February 4, 2011
[...] Mr. Silver and I seem to share a fondness for two-axis field maps as a way to wrangle with a pool of qualitative information. Earlier, I used the same kind of strategy to sort my thoughts regarding peeing in public. [...]