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«It was another Skin»

The Kitchen in 1950s Western Australia

by Sian Supski (Author)
©2007 Thesis XII, 294 Pages

Summary

This study examines the meanings of the kitchen to women who were wives, mothers, housewives and homemakers in the 1950s in Western Australia. It uses qualitative data collected from oral history interviews with migrant and Australian born women.
The book provides insight to women’s everyday lives and analyses practices, such as cooking, ironing, budgeting, shopping, dishwashing and decorating which provide women with power. Central themes of this study explore the meaning of home and kitchen design and analyses how practices of the kitchen inform women’s multiple identities. It also shows how dominant discourses, such as domesticity, femininity and efficiency reinforce gendered notions of women’s work in the kitchen. Moreover, the book examines points of resistance, it shows that women perform their everyday practices, design their kitchens and decorate them in ways that perhaps were not always intended by domestic science experts, designers, architects and manufacturers.

Details

Pages
XII, 294
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039112340
Language
English
Keywords
Westaustralien Küche Frau Alltagskultur Gender Study Geschichte 1950-1960 Architecture Women's Study
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. XII, 294 pp.

Biographical notes

Sian Supski (Author)

The Author: Sian Supski is a Research Fellow in the Australia Research Institute, Curtin University of Technology, Australia. She received her doctorate in Sociology from Curtin University of Technology. She has taught Sociology and Australian Studies at universities in Western Australia, and has edited and published a number of journal issues and articles on kitchens and food writing in Australia.

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Title: «It was another Skin»