Living in a Man-Made World: Gender Assumptions in Modern Housing Design
There are powerful assumptions about gender divisions inscribed in the built environment. Housing is the site of some complex processes in society. In making and remaking their homes, women and men define their place in the world and are defined by it. Taking a historical perspective, Living in a Man-Made World (originally published in 1991) is the first to make a complete examination of the relationship of gender to housing design. Design is seen in broad terms and revealed as part of the social process of society, rather than a separate sphere in which the architect has sole responsibility for decision making. Many of the ills of the contemporary environment can be traced to the barriers that have been built up between the concerns of social policy, planning and architecture. By breaking down these barriers through a synoptic study of how gender assumptions have operated in the design of housing, this book points the way to how improvements in design and in the built environment may be better achieved.

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Living in a Man-Made World: Gender Assumptions in Modern Housing Design
There are powerful assumptions about gender divisions inscribed in the built environment. Housing is the site of some complex processes in society. In making and remaking their homes, women and men define their place in the world and are defined by it. Taking a historical perspective, Living in a Man-Made World (originally published in 1991) is the first to make a complete examination of the relationship of gender to housing design. Design is seen in broad terms and revealed as part of the social process of society, rather than a separate sphere in which the architect has sole responsibility for decision making. Many of the ills of the contemporary environment can be traced to the barriers that have been built up between the concerns of social policy, planning and architecture. By breaking down these barriers through a synoptic study of how gender assumptions have operated in the design of housing, this book points the way to how improvements in design and in the built environment may be better achieved.

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Living in a Man-Made World: Gender Assumptions in Modern Housing Design

Living in a Man-Made World: Gender Assumptions in Modern Housing Design

by Marion Roberts
Living in a Man-Made World: Gender Assumptions in Modern Housing Design

Living in a Man-Made World: Gender Assumptions in Modern Housing Design

by Marion Roberts

Hardcover

$110.00 
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Overview

There are powerful assumptions about gender divisions inscribed in the built environment. Housing is the site of some complex processes in society. In making and remaking their homes, women and men define their place in the world and are defined by it. Taking a historical perspective, Living in a Man-Made World (originally published in 1991) is the first to make a complete examination of the relationship of gender to housing design. Design is seen in broad terms and revealed as part of the social process of society, rather than a separate sphere in which the architect has sole responsibility for decision making. Many of the ills of the contemporary environment can be traced to the barriers that have been built up between the concerns of social policy, planning and architecture. By breaking down these barriers through a synoptic study of how gender assumptions have operated in the design of housing, this book points the way to how improvements in design and in the built environment may be better achieved.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781003863779
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 04/01/2025
Series: Routledge Revivals
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Marion Roberts is Professor Emeritus of Urban Design at the University of Westminster, UK. Her research interests have been in the field of urban design with a particular emphasis on the relationships between social issues and their physical context.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction  2. Women as homemakers I  3. Women as homemakers II  4. Women workers and the domestic ideal  5. A woman’s home is her factory  6. ‘We saw it as a dream’  7. A respectable life  8. From there to here

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