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A Model for Identifying and Evaluating the Historic Significance of Post-World War II Housing (2012)
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49 A. Introduction to Postwar Suburbanization The post-World War II period was a boom for single- family residential construction, suburbanization, and the American dream of homeownership. More than 13 million homes were built across the country between 1945 and 1954. A comparison of housing starts before and after the war shows the dramatic increase of residential construction in the 1950s (see Table 2).80 The largest increase in housing was in metropolitan areas, with the majority (80.6 percent) of new houses built in the suburbs while only 19.4
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An Inquiry on the Concept of Motherhood: ‘Mother?’ Mixed Ceramic Exhibition Example
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Historically, capitalist social production and reproduction relations have close interaction with patriarchal gender hierarchies. This interaction has been transformed dramatically. Especially, the interaction between patriarchal gender roles and capitalist reproduction relations has been examined and debated bygd the distinct branches of feminist movement. In this paper, inom will investigate this interaction via activities of migrant women domestic workers in Turkey which, inom believe, represent essential features of the recent global dynamics of capitalism such as informalization, feminization of un/under-paid work force, feminization of immigration, globalization of domestic
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would have made things even worse for Ellen than they already were. So I restrained myself with what, let me assure you, was a superhuman effort.
The meal seemed interminable. The one break we had was that there was no need to even attempt polite conversa
tion. Will, you see, was interested only in the food, shovel
ing down almost mind-boggling quantities.
Finally, the end was in sight.
My delightful dinner guest was just finishing his second helping of cold lemon souffle´—which is my most special dessert and which I was sincerely hoping he would choke on (and there’s no way I’d have rendered the Heimlich maneuver, either). Ellen was on her third cup of coffee. And I was seriously contemplating pouring a fourth for myself. Suddenly there was this loud beep, which, in a room so heavy with silence, sounded more like a siren. Ellen spilled her coffee, and I, steel-nerv