AS HOUSEWIVES WE ARE WORMS - WOMEN, MODERNITY AND THE HOME QUESTION

Authors
Citation
L. Johnson, AS HOUSEWIVES WE ARE WORMS - WOMEN, MODERNITY AND THE HOME QUESTION, Cultural studies, 10(3), 1996, pp. 449-463
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Communication,"Art & Humanities General
Journal title
ISSN journal
09502386
Volume
10
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
449 - 463
Database
ISI
SICI code
0950-2386(1996)10:3<449:AHWAW->2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
This paper explores the possibility of a feminist understanding of the concept of home. It begins with an analysis of the way in which a num ber of feminist scholars utilize a concept of home that retains the ge ndered dichotomies characteristic of modernism. The writings of femini sts as diverse as Betty Friedan and Teresa de Lauretis are examined to indicate the pervasiveness of this tendency. The paper then goes on t o argue that an historical investigation of women's experiences of mod ernity provides a way of rethinking the concept of home and its place in the modern world. It discusses the different meanings given to one particular image of the home in Australia in the first decade after th e Second World War. This material demonstrates the historical and cont ested nature of our understandings of both home and modernity. But mor e importantly, it points to an understanding among women, and in some of the discourses through which they were addressed in the popular pre ss at this time, of home as an active creating of place. As such, this space was not seen as opposed to or a place to retreat from the moder n world. On the contrary, it represented a different vision of what mo dernity should be about. A rethinking of home and its relationship to modernity is necessary, it is suggested, if feminism is to destabilize those very oppositions that have been central to how womanhood has be en defined in Western cultural traditions.