Building a Housewife's Paradise: Gender, Politics, and American Grocery Stores in the Twentieth Century

by Tracey Deutsch

Paperback, 2012

Status

Available

Call number

381.456413009730904

Publication

The University of North Carolina Press (2012), Edition: New edition, 352 pages

Description

Supermarkets are a mundane feature in the landscape, but as Tracey Deutsch reveals, they represent a major transformation in the ways that Americans feed themselves. In her examination of the history of food distribution in the United States, Deutsch demonstrates the important roles that gender, business, class, and the state played in the evolution of American grocery stores. Deutsch's analysis reframes shopping as labor and embeds consumption in the structures of capitalism. The supermarket, that icon of postwar American life, emerged not from straightforward consumer demand for low prices, Deutsch argues, but through government regulations, women customers' demands, and retailers' concerns with financial success and control of the "shop floor." From small neighborhood stores to huge corporate chains of supermarkets, Deutsch traces the charged story of the origins of contemporary food distribution, treating topics as varied as everyday food purchases, the sales tax, postwar celebrations and critiques of mass consumption, and 1960s and 1970s urban insurrections. Demonstrating connections between women's work and the history of capitalism, Deutsch locates the origins of supermarkets in the politics of twentieth-century consumption.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

352 p.; 6.25 inches

ISBN

0807859761 / 9780807859766
Page: 0.2986 seconds