<p>Since the 1970s, feminist historians and polemicists have struggled to uncover the ordinary lives of women. They believe that gender ideals and biases are a critical part of the weft and weave of daily life. But the quotidian has been a restricted field in our discipline, often used to define a particular building type rather than the lives of architects. For example, we know little about the workdays of professionals or their labour in the workplace. The architectural office - its daily transactions and everyday culture - remains obscure. Even when represented in histories of the profession, the architectural office is filtered through a top-down lens trained on practice directors. The labour and lives of architecture’s male and female ...
The issue of gender inequality in architecture has been part of the profession’s discourse for many ...
“To write women back into history”, is an often-used phrase in recent feminist discourse. More and m...
In 1977, Susana Torre addressed the lack of documentation and representation of women’s design and b...
Since the 1970s, feminist historians and polemicists have struggled to uncover the ordinary lives of...
Architects operate in an intensely visual world, and as such visual markers can be seen as keys to t...
Built space inevitably structures social relationships by creating interior and exterior spaces, cat...
This study aims at understanding the material and cultural reasons why women leave the profession of...
The article critically investigates recent assumptions that professional women are en route to equal...
Using data from 37 interviews carried out with female architects in Britain, this paper examines how...
Architecture represents a creative, high profile and influential profession and yet remains underthe...
Since its establishment as a profession in the late nineteenth century, women have held a marginal p...
This dissertation examines the history of the women’s movement in architecture in the United States....
Women architects are effectively absent from architectural history in Australia. Consulting first th...
This thesis investigates the potential for a feminist practice in architecture. Its first part focu...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
The issue of gender inequality in architecture has been part of the profession’s discourse for many ...
“To write women back into history”, is an often-used phrase in recent feminist discourse. More and m...
In 1977, Susana Torre addressed the lack of documentation and representation of women’s design and b...
Since the 1970s, feminist historians and polemicists have struggled to uncover the ordinary lives of...
Architects operate in an intensely visual world, and as such visual markers can be seen as keys to t...
Built space inevitably structures social relationships by creating interior and exterior spaces, cat...
This study aims at understanding the material and cultural reasons why women leave the profession of...
The article critically investigates recent assumptions that professional women are en route to equal...
Using data from 37 interviews carried out with female architects in Britain, this paper examines how...
Architecture represents a creative, high profile and influential profession and yet remains underthe...
Since its establishment as a profession in the late nineteenth century, women have held a marginal p...
This dissertation examines the history of the women’s movement in architecture in the United States....
Women architects are effectively absent from architectural history in Australia. Consulting first th...
This thesis investigates the potential for a feminist practice in architecture. Its first part focu...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
The issue of gender inequality in architecture has been part of the profession’s discourse for many ...
“To write women back into history”, is an often-used phrase in recent feminist discourse. More and m...
In 1977, Susana Torre addressed the lack of documentation and representation of women’s design and b...