“…1 Although geographers have carried out some fascinating work on animal manure as a pollutant (Lowe et al, 1997;Seymour and Clark, 1991;Ivey et al, 2006) and a fertilizer (Chisholm, 1961;Baker, 1973;Widgren, 1979;Adams and Mortimore, 1997;Harris, 1999;Harris and Yusuf, 2001;Matless, 2001;Robbins, 2004;Jewitt and Baker, 2006;Baker and Jewitt, 2007;Grantham, 2007;Ingram, 2008;Williams, 2008), only a small number of geographers have been actively engaged in research that deals with human waste; and most of this work deals with it in somewhat tangential (though nonetheless important) ways. Examples include research within medical geography on faecal transmission routes (Anderson, 1947;May, 1950;1952;Howe, 1963;1980;Haviland, 1982;Haggett, 1994;Rupke, 2000;Smallman-Raynor et al, 2001;2004a;2004b;Cliff et al, 2004;Abrahams, 2006), cultural and historical geographies of agriculture, organicism, sanitation and cholera (Bacon 1956;Smith 1975;Kearns 1984;1989;1991;Sheail 1993;Colten 1994;Goddard 1996: Matless, 2001Gandy, 2005Krantz, 2006: McFarlane, 2008a) and wider theoretical conceptualisations of dirt (Krantz 2006;…”