Recently, historians have began to question whether the 1950s were the high
tide of domesticity. They, have reconceptualized the 1950s by distinguishi
ng the immediate postwar period from the later 1950s. They have distinguish
ed between groups of women and shown how some contested familialism, albeit
sometimes unwittingly. But they have not considered sufficiently how the s
tate is conceptualized. State policies changed in the 1950s. The state was
not a monolith, and different agencies worked at cross-purposes. The state
did not initially intend to promote disillusionment with the home, but it w
as an effect of its policies in the 1950s. The New Zealand state is held to
be effective in promoting domestic feminism and women's domesticity for mu
ch of the twentieth century,. This article indicates it also became a power
ful, albeit within limits, subverter of women's domesticity during the 1950
s.