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

    Research output: Contribution to specialist publicationArticle

    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, Kitchen planning. The paper argues that discourses
    surrounding the geographies of the kitchen can be seen as representative of wider societal shifts in the position of both middle- and working-class women at this time. The paper ends by considering what these discourses tell us about the changing nature of gendered spaces at this time.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages42-60
    Number of pages18
    Volume11
    No.1
    Specialist publicationCultural Geographies
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2004

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