1st Edition

Imagining Home Gender, Race And National Identity, 1945-1964

By Wendy Webster Copyright 1998
    268 Pages
    by Routledge

    268 Pages
    by Routledge

    Imagining Home offers a unique examination of ideas and images of home in Britain during a period of national decline and loss of imperial power. In exploring the relationship between gender, 'race' and national identity, it higlights the continuing importance of empire in imaginings of the nation during a period of decolonization. Analyzing the significance of colonialism and racism in shaping ideas of motherhood, employment and domestictiy, it traces the process by which Englishness was increasingly associated with domestic order, and the home and family constructed as white.
    Drawing extensively on oral history and life-writing, Imagining Home examines the multiple meanings of home to women in narratives of beloning and unbelonging. Its focus on the complex interrelationships of white and black women's lives and identities offers a new perspective on this period.

    Homecomings; unbelongings; home and colonialism; the new England; good homes; home and work; domestic identities.

    Biography

    Webster, Wendy

    'A riveting study of gender, race and national identity.' - Guardian

    'Highly readable and authoratative, introducing readers to potentially difficult ideas in a thoroughly accessible way.' - Ethnic and Racial Studies

    'This is an interesting and important book and should stand as a landmark study for this formative period of contemporary British history.' - Professor Mary Chamberlain, Women's History Review