2004
DOI: 10.1191/1474474003eu292oa
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Designed by women and designing women: gender, planning and the geographies of the kitchen in Britain 1917-1946

Abstract: During the early decades of the twentieth century in Britain, architects focused on domestic architecture to a degree previously unseen. This paper considers the geographies of the shifting ideological relationships between the architectural space of the home and women, both those who designed and those who used it. The analysis centres around the spaces of the kitchen, and the work of two key individuals: the housing consultant Elizabeth Denby, and the Modern architect Jane Drew, and her publication of 1944, … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
32
0
1

Year Published

2005
2005
2018
2018

Publication Types

Select...
5
3
2

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 39 publications
(43 citation statements)
references
References 4 publications
0
32
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…That this concern is not a recent one is reflected by feminist utopians in the US calling for the 'socialisation of domestic work' and the creation of 'kitchenless' houses as early as the mid-nineteenth century (Hayden 1978: 275). Also taking a historical perspective, Llewellyn (2004), Saarikangas (2006) and Lloyd and Johnson (2004) highlight the emphasis placed on functionality and how this was translated in practical terms. Although the domestic would remain, unchallenged, as women's domain, the application of time-and-motion principles, the prioritisation of the working triangle (see Johnson 2006 for variations on this) and masculine 5 values associated with industrialisation infiltrated the way in which kitchens were designed.…”
Section: Kitchen Design and The Negotiation Of Domestic Spacementioning
confidence: 99%
“…That this concern is not a recent one is reflected by feminist utopians in the US calling for the 'socialisation of domestic work' and the creation of 'kitchenless' houses as early as the mid-nineteenth century (Hayden 1978: 275). Also taking a historical perspective, Llewellyn (2004), Saarikangas (2006) and Lloyd and Johnson (2004) highlight the emphasis placed on functionality and how this was translated in practical terms. Although the domestic would remain, unchallenged, as women's domain, the application of time-and-motion principles, the prioritisation of the working triangle (see Johnson 2006 for variations on this) and masculine 5 values associated with industrialisation infiltrated the way in which kitchens were designed.…”
Section: Kitchen Design and The Negotiation Of Domestic Spacementioning
confidence: 99%
“…77 Mark Llewellyn's analysis of the gendered geographies of inter-war British kitchens suggested that the attempts of women housing reformers to reshape these locations were informed by principles of Taylorism (or 'scientific management') and aimed at improving the efficiency of the domestic worker. 78 There are certainly echoes of this in the writings of some Sub-Committee members such as Mrs Peel, whose wartime collection, The Labour Saving House, called for the application of 'modern methods to the working of our households, in which they are needed as much as in the office or factory'. 79 Yet, although she drew parallels between the kitchen and the factory where 'the labour of an over-tired worker becomes practically worthless', neither she nor other members of the Women's Housing Sub-Committee considered efficiency to be an end in itself, or connected it to ideas about improving domestic productivity more generally.…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the paper expands on a body of work that looks at the articulation of architecture and home (Attfield, , 2000(Attfield, , 2002Blunt, 2008;Busch, 1999;Chapman, 1998;Dowling, 2008;Jacobs & Cairns, 2008;Jerram, 2006;Llewellyn, 2004aLlewellyn, , 2004bLloyd & Johnson, 2004;Miller, 2001b;Munro, 2013;Rapoport, 1982;Ravetz & Turkington, 1995), with a novel focus on the spatiality of this articulation.…”
Section: Exploring the Spatial Articulation Of Architecture With Homementioning
confidence: 99%