Another Modernism: Home Economics and the Design of Domestic Space in the US, 1900-1960
By (Author) Anna Myjak-Pycia
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
10th July 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Architecture: residential and domestic buildings
Architecture: interior design
History of design
Gender studies: women and girls
Disability: social aspects
640.09730904
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Targeting an important gap in design history, Another Modernism examines how domestic space was conceived by the US home economics movement in the first half of the 20th century. In doing so, it tells the little-known story of how home economists mainly women offered a challenge to the approach of mainstream modernist architects and architecture. Along the way it uncovers new, unacknowledged contributions of women designers to domestic architecture and design history, and reveals innovative early approaches to concepts such as accommodating the disabled body, participatory design, sustainable design, and anti-consumerism. In contrast to the modernist model of space, which was primarily visual, contemporary home economists centred on a user who interacts with the interior in a tactile, bodily way. Both movements strove for efficiency, but they understood it differently: for many modernist architects the term efficiency denoted functionalist aesthetics, whereas for home economists it signified design solutions intended to ease the labour of an average American homemaker. This book analyses the home economists conception of space and argues that their focus on the users corporeality, tactility, and preferences, and her engagement in the design process, constituted an alternative model of modern architecture a popular and largely rural modernism which focused on the specificity of the female user and her personal experience of the domestic interior. Based on little-known archival material, and with an emphasis on (mostly) female researchers and users/occupants, Another Modernism will appeal to architects, design historians, and anyone interested in gender, women's, and disability studies.
Anna Myjak-Pycia is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for the History and Theory of Architecture (GTA), ETH Zrich, Switzerland.