Most Americans now live in suburban places. While suburbs are common throughout the country today, they were not always prevalent. They developed slowly before experiencing a major boom following the end of the Second World War. Factors such as economic growth, housing shortages, and federal programs helped developers create suburbs across the country. One particular developer, Levitt and Sons, profited greatly off of the demand for housing by creating suburbs that not only provided people with a place to live, but with a middle-class way of life. Suburban developers such as the Levitts created a distinct set of expectations for the residents of their communities. They showcased these ideals in their advertisements. This paper will explore ...
Whether through affirmative housing policies or mandatory legislation, there have been numerous effo...
The trend of mass suburbanization that followed World War II led to increasing segregation and inequ...
Housing patterns in the United States have changed over time. During the first part of the nation’s ...
Roughly 62% of Americans identify as middle-class but do not meet the middle-class characteristics l...
This entry is published on a peer reviewed encyclopedia and it provides a definition of suburbanizat...
In the decades following World War II the American landscape underwent a profound change as suburbs ...
In the wake of World War II many urbanites left cities for a suburban life that has been persistentl...
The suburban ideal of the postwar (mid-1940s-late 1960s) U.S., like other eras of suburban developme...
This American Studies project explored the relationship between two novels and a short story to the ...
Segregated housing became a subject for scientific inquiry between the New Deal and Civil Rights era...
In Bourgeois Utopias, a cultural history of suburbia in America, Robert Fishman states the fundament...
Through the historical analysis of a public housing project built in Greenbelt, Maryland in 1937, th...
This article addresses the social history of suburbanization in America in the twentieth century by ...
This article addresses the social history of suburbanization in America in the twentieth century by ...
There is a growing concern that traditional suburban tract developments, because they were designed ...
Whether through affirmative housing policies or mandatory legislation, there have been numerous effo...
The trend of mass suburbanization that followed World War II led to increasing segregation and inequ...
Housing patterns in the United States have changed over time. During the first part of the nation’s ...
Roughly 62% of Americans identify as middle-class but do not meet the middle-class characteristics l...
This entry is published on a peer reviewed encyclopedia and it provides a definition of suburbanizat...
In the decades following World War II the American landscape underwent a profound change as suburbs ...
In the wake of World War II many urbanites left cities for a suburban life that has been persistentl...
The suburban ideal of the postwar (mid-1940s-late 1960s) U.S., like other eras of suburban developme...
This American Studies project explored the relationship between two novels and a short story to the ...
Segregated housing became a subject for scientific inquiry between the New Deal and Civil Rights era...
In Bourgeois Utopias, a cultural history of suburbia in America, Robert Fishman states the fundament...
Through the historical analysis of a public housing project built in Greenbelt, Maryland in 1937, th...
This article addresses the social history of suburbanization in America in the twentieth century by ...
This article addresses the social history of suburbanization in America in the twentieth century by ...
There is a growing concern that traditional suburban tract developments, because they were designed ...
Whether through affirmative housing policies or mandatory legislation, there have been numerous effo...
The trend of mass suburbanization that followed World War II led to increasing segregation and inequ...
Housing patterns in the United States have changed over time. During the first part of the nation’s ...