Constructing the Patriarchal City
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Product details
- ISBN 9781439915691
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 20 Apr 2018
- Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
In the Anglo-Atlantic world of the late nineteenth century, groups of urban residents struggled to reconstruct their cities in the wake of industrialization and to create the modern city. New professional men wanted an orderly city that functioned for economic development. Women’s vision challenged the men’s right to reconstruct the city and resisted the prevailing male idea that women in public caused the city’s disorder.
Constructing the Patriarchal City compares the ideas and activities of men and women in four English-speaking cities that shared similar ideological, professional, and political contexts. Historian Maureen Flanagan investigates how ideas about gender shaped the patriarchal city as men used their expertise in architecture, engineering, and planning to fashion a built environment for male economic enterprise and to confine women in the private home. Women consistently challenged men to produce a more equitable social infrastructure that included housing that would keep people inside the city, public toilets for women as well as men, housing for single, working women, and public spaces that were open and safe for all residents.
Maureen A. Flanagan is Emerita Professor of History at the Illinois Institute of Technology and Michigan State University. She is the author of America Reformed: Progressives and Progressivisms, 1890s-1920s, Seeing with their Hearts: Chicago Women and the Vision of the Good City, 1871-1933, and Charter Reform in Chicago.
