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Stressed-out students seek solace in toilet graffiti

Edinburgh Napier University researcher spends 10 months studying bathroom scribblings and concludes the often supportive messages are valued by learners

Published on
June 20, 2024
Last updated
June 20, 2024
A toilet with a  montage of different graffiti writing over the image to illustrate Loo graffiti offers campus solace
Source: istock/Mabel Victoria Montage

Graffiti in university toilets is often dismissed as inane, unsightly or straight-out vandalism, but might it also be a vital source of support for students struggling with their mental health?

That is the contention of sociolinguist Mabel Victoria, who spent 10 months recording and analysing the scrawls that appeared in a women鈥檚 bathroom at Edinburgh Napier University, where she is a lecturer.

Despite the university painting over the graffiti several times throughout this period, students continued to write their thoughts on everything from exams and dissertations to Brexit and student protests in Hong Kong, explains Dr Victoria in a recent paper in the journal .

Most of the graffiti was, however, words of encouragement for other female students, or people updating each other on their own mental well-being, says Dr Victoria, who took the title of her paper, 鈥淭his Wall Does More for Mental Health than the Uni Does鈥, directly from a student comment.

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鈥淓ven though our university offers lots of support to students, this cold and grubby wall mattered hugely for many students,鈥 Dr Victoria told 探花视频.

鈥淣owadays students can use Instagram or Facebook to talk to each other, so I was surprised that many still want to use pens and pencils to communicate like this,鈥 she continued, saying the warmth of the graffiti conversations, which offered advice and encouragement, led her to document the messages.

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鈥淢ost graffiti studies tend to focus on the gender differences of graffiti, and how men鈥檚 graffiti is ruder. That seems fairly predictable and uncontroversial. But what was interesting here was the emotional attachment that students had to this wall as a way to support each other,鈥 said Dr Victoria.

In her paper, Dr Victoria states that toilet graffiti had the 鈥減otential to yield more authentic values and opinions than traditional ways of directly soliciting opinions from students via surveys or interviews which might make them feel hesitant and uncomfortable鈥.

It could, she suggests, be used as an 鈥渁dditional tool to learn about the prevailing sentiments and attitudes鈥.

So should universities rethink their policies of removing toilet graffiti and instead seek to learn from it, or even encourage it?

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鈥淭hat鈥檚 a difficult question,鈥 said Dr Victoria. 鈥淚聽did speak to cleaners who were very angry about this graffiti 鈥 they felt it was unsightly and dirty, and came from nothing more than boredom.

鈥淚 understand this view and graffiti is illegal, but I聽think universities should allow some space 鈥 maybe not a toilet, but somewhere informal that simulates the privacy of a restroom 鈥 where students can write these messages.鈥

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽Loo graffiti offers campus solace

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Reader's comments (1)

As a psychotherapist, I think the idea suggested in the article - that the University provide a space where students can write messages - may be wrongheaded as it doesn't take into account the possibility that it being an illicit and secretive place to write the messages is a factor in why people choose to write them there. The fact that it is in the toilet - the place where it is legitimate to expel our dirty and shameful matter and seems significant.

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