2015
DOI: 10.1093/ehr/cev019
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‘From the Housewife’s Point of View’: Female Citizenship and the Gendered Domestic Interior in Post-First World War Britain, 1918–1928.

Abstract: This article explores the work of the Women’s Housing Sub-Committee, a government-appointed body which reported to the Advisory Council of the Ministry of Reconstruction, in recognising the home as a key site where active, respectable female citizens might be produced. The Sub-Committee started work in 1918, a month after the Representation of the People Act gave votes to some British women, prompting a wide debate about how best to integrate them into political life. Charged with reporting on plans for post-w… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Using new archival evidence, she examines the ways in which middle‐class women working in the arts constructed professional networks and identities. Cowman investigates how women's changing political and economic roles influenced discussions about improvements in working‐class housing in the interwar period. Taking a different approach, Stoops uses a study of the Victorian pornography industry to argue for a higher level of female participation than previously acknowledged.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using new archival evidence, she examines the ways in which middle‐class women working in the arts constructed professional networks and identities. Cowman investigates how women's changing political and economic roles influenced discussions about improvements in working‐class housing in the interwar period. Taking a different approach, Stoops uses a study of the Victorian pornography industry to argue for a higher level of female participation than previously acknowledged.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%