ABSTRACT

SHORTLISTED FOR THE COLVIN PRIZE 2021! Awarded by the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain, the Colvin Prize is one of the world's most prestigious honors in the field of architectural history. The medal is awarded annually to the author or authors of an outstanding work of reference of broad importance to the discipline; all modes of publication are eligible, including catalogues, gazetteers, digital databases and online resources. Suffragette City was nominated due to the new ways in which its contributors cast light on the work of women to shape the architecture of communities around the English-speaking world.

Suffragette City brings together a collection of illustrated essays dedicated to exploring and analysing cases in which women have resourcefully leveraged or defied the politics of gender to form and reform architecture and urbanism. Throughout much of modern history, women have been assigned to the margins and expected to play passive social roles. Suffragette City draws on nineteenth- and twentieth-century architectural case studies from the English-speaking world, including the USA, South Africa, Scotland, India and England, to examine places and moments when women stepped into the centre of public life and claimed opportunities to shape the fabrics of their communities. Their engagements with the built environment consistently  transcended architecture to achieve the level of urbanism, as whole networks of relationships came into their purview, transforming the architecture of socio-political connection as well as the confronting the physical divisions that have historically lain along racial, economic and gendered lines. Academics, researchers and students engaged in architectural history, theory, urbanism, gender studies and social and cultural history will be interested in this fascinating, politically-charged text.

part I|2 pages

Reconfiguring communities

chapter 1|24 pages

An urban experiment in spiritual motherhood

Gender, class and reform in Edwardian Edinburgh

chapter 2|24 pages

Amaza’s Azurest

Modern architecture and the ‘New Negro’ woman

chapter 3|28 pages

Life and breath to the city

Women, urbanism, and the birth of the historic preservation movement

part II|2 pages

Pathfinding in the professions

chapter 4|23 pages

The ‘minister of municipalities’

Shared space and social fabric in the work of Caroline Bartlett Crane

chapter 5|26 pages

This strange interloper

Building products and the emergence of the architect-shopper in 1930s Britain

chapter 6|21 pages

Adapting and anticipating

The home planning consultancy work of Hilde Reiss and Jane Drew, 1943–45

part III|2 pages

Staking claims to urban space

chapter 7|20 pages

Almost as good as a Frank Gehry

Doris Duke, Maya Lin, and the gendered politics of public space in Newport, Rhode Island

chapter 8|19 pages

Beyond the bind

Architecture, gendered agency and South African urban struggle

chapter 9|18 pages

Inroads for the outsourced

Call-center graveyard shifts and women’s impact on the nocturnal streets of Mumbai, India