Sentenced to Everyday Life Feminism and the Housewife

by ;
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2005-01-15
Publisher(s): Berg Pub Ltd
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Summary

The history of the housewife is a complicated and uneasy narrative, rife with contradictions, tensions, and unanswered questions. What is the relationship between women and the home? And why are women reluctant to call themselves housewives? Starting with an exploration of why 1940s housewives became associated with drudgery, this book examines how magazines and advertising articulated connected women with the domestic sphere, while 1950s films explored the shifting boundaries between social, family, and individual desires and constraints for women. Johnson and Lloyd also study the home as a site of boredom, and the balance between work and family in the modern world. By situating their examination in a still unresolved and contemporary topic, Johnson and Lloyd offer us both a backward glance and a forward-looking perspective into domesticity and the modern self.

Author Biography

Lesley Johnson is Deputy Vice-Cancellor (Research) and Professor of Cultural Studies, Griffith University, Queensland.

Justine Lloyd is Visiting Professor in Australian Cultural Studies and Australian Postdoctoral Research Fellow.

Table of Contents

List of Figures vii
Preface and Acknowledgements viii
1 'Only a Housewife' 1(22)
Defining the Housewife: Contemporary Feminism
4(3)
Defining the Housewife: Early Second Wave Feminism
7(2)
Reviewing the 1950's
9(3)
Feminism and the Subject of Modernity
12(3)
'Good-Enough Feminists?'
15(8)
2 Whom Does She Represent? 23(24)
'The Future in Her Hands'
23(4)
'As Housewives, We Are Worms'
27(7)
The Meanings of Home
34(6)
At Home and at Work
40(7)
3 Dream Stuff 47(42)
The Housing Problem
49(2)
The Housewife Speaks
51(7)
The Importance of Looking
58(7)
On the Kitchen Front
65(15)
The View from the Kitchen Window
80(9)
4 The Three Faces of Eve 89(30)
Homework and Housework
90(4)
Definitions of Melodrama
94(3)
Putting on the Apron
97(5)
The Childless Housewife
102(4)
A Doubled Plot of Femininity
106(4)
Harpies like Mildred
110(9)
5 Boredom: The Emotional Slum 119(30)
'Time to Burn'
123(4)
Housewives' Corner
127(4)
Finding Time
131(10)
Declining Audiences: An Afterword on the Housewife
141(8)
6 Conclusion 149(14)
Bibliography 163(14)
Index 177

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