The post-war period in Australia (1945–1965) saw women returning to housework and housewifery from their wartime paid employment. To assist women in this role, Melbourne publisher M. A. White published Women’s World (1958), a comprehensive training manual for women, in which its editor Alleyne Jukes referred to women as unacknowledged specialists. Men, she argued, spent years of their lives training for their chosen careers but women received no training for the significant role that they played in the home. The happiness of the whole family depended on their skill and knowledge, yet this was mostly gained through ‘hit and miss methods’. Women’s World offered to solve this problem by giving women access to a ‘finishing school’ – beyond the ...
Assembling 10 essays from around the globe which engage variously with the space in which food prepa...
The New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, New Zealand\u27most read women\u27s magazine, greatly increased its ...
The myth that the women's movement in Britain went into decline in the decade following the Second W...
The post-war period in Australia (1945–1965) saw women returning to housework and housewifery from t...
Seeking to redirect working-class women's discontent but also genuinely outraged by post-World ...
This article explores the influence of The Australian Women’s Weekly’s ‘cookery experts’, or food ed...
During the postwar period the modern family home assumed a special place in the Australian imaginary...
This paper considers the contribution of women to culinary practice in Australia in the post-war era...
In the early 1950s, home economist Betty King was invented by registered Australian company, World F...
This study examines the meanings of the kitchen to women who were wives, mothers, housewives and hom...
The topic which I have chosen to research - 'Women and Domesticity' focusing on the sub-culture of r...
This thesis examines the meanings of the kitchen to women who were wives, mothers, housewives and ho...
© 2009 Dr. Moya Patricia McFadzeanThis thesis investigates glory boxes as cultural sites of consumpt...
During the postwar period the modern family home assumed a special place in the Australian imaginary...
This article examines the notions of the romantic dinner in post-war Australia, using material cultu...
Assembling 10 essays from around the globe which engage variously with the space in which food prepa...
The New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, New Zealand\u27most read women\u27s magazine, greatly increased its ...
The myth that the women's movement in Britain went into decline in the decade following the Second W...
The post-war period in Australia (1945–1965) saw women returning to housework and housewifery from t...
Seeking to redirect working-class women's discontent but also genuinely outraged by post-World ...
This article explores the influence of The Australian Women’s Weekly’s ‘cookery experts’, or food ed...
During the postwar period the modern family home assumed a special place in the Australian imaginary...
This paper considers the contribution of women to culinary practice in Australia in the post-war era...
In the early 1950s, home economist Betty King was invented by registered Australian company, World F...
This study examines the meanings of the kitchen to women who were wives, mothers, housewives and hom...
The topic which I have chosen to research - 'Women and Domesticity' focusing on the sub-culture of r...
This thesis examines the meanings of the kitchen to women who were wives, mothers, housewives and ho...
© 2009 Dr. Moya Patricia McFadzeanThis thesis investigates glory boxes as cultural sites of consumpt...
During the postwar period the modern family home assumed a special place in the Australian imaginary...
This article examines the notions of the romantic dinner in post-war Australia, using material cultu...
Assembling 10 essays from around the globe which engage variously with the space in which food prepa...
The New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, New Zealand\u27most read women\u27s magazine, greatly increased its ...
The myth that the women's movement in Britain went into decline in the decade following the Second W...