Octavia Hill women housing managers in South Africa: Femininity and urban government

被引:3
|
作者
Robinson, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Dept Geog, London WC2A 2AE, England
关键词
D O I
10.1006/jhge.1998.0091
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Women trained in a system of housing management developed by Octavia Hill in Victorian England were employed in South Africa's Coloured and European townships from the mid-1930s. They were also involved in training South African women in this tradition which emphasized the mutual responsibilities of landlords and tenants and rested upon the formation of trusting relationships or friendships between women housing managers and the tenants. Octavia Hill's followers worked hard to make a place for women in the field of housing management and claimed that their femininity gave them special expertise in this area, especially in terms of training housewives in domestic skills and in building up the relations of trust required by Octavia Hill's system. This paper describes the implementation of this system of management in South Africa and considers the implications of the role of women in housing management for our thinking about the gendered character of the state. My main argument is that rather than being a precedent for the value of incorporating femininity and women into the state, Octavia Hill's management tradition had already incorporated both historically masculine and historically feminine practices. In so far as she and her followers (and perhaps other female reformers) played a role in shaping the nature of the state, then it could be argued the state reflected a mediation of masculinity and femininity rather than a dominant masculinity and a subordinated or segregated femininity. (C) 1998 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:459 / 481
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Perceived Authenticity of Iconic Heritage Sites in Urban Tourism: the Case of Constitutional Hill, Johannesburg, South Africa
    Ivanovic M.
    [J]. Urban Forum, 2014, 25 (4) : 501 - 515
  • [42] Student Housing and Homelessness: A Paradox of Urban Gentrification in Pretoria's Old East, South Africa
    Mashayamombe, John
    Vally, Rehana
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN REVIEW OF SOCIOLOGY, 2020, 51 (3-4) : 95 - 113
  • [43] Cellphones and romantic relationships of young women in urban informal settlements in South Africa
    Gibbs, Andrew
    Willan, Samantha
    Jewkes, Rachel
    [J]. CULTURE HEALTH & SEXUALITY, 2022, 24 (10) : 1380 - 1394
  • [44] Diabetes care among urban women in Soweto, South Africa: a qualitative study
    Emily Mendenhall
    Shane A. Norris
    [J]. BMC Public Health, 15
  • [45] Diabetes care among urban women in Soweto, South Africa: a qualitative study
    Mendenhall, Emily
    Norris, Shane A.
    [J]. BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2015, 15
  • [46] Urban residence and elevated blood pressure among migrant women in South Africa
    Pheiffer, Chantel F.
    McGarvey, Stephen T.
    Ginsburg, Carren
    White, Michael J.
    [J]. HEALTH & PLACE, 2023, 83
  • [47] Low-income housing residents' challenges with their government install solar water heaters: A case of South Africa
    Aigbavboa, Clinton
    [J]. CLEAN, EFFICIENT AND AFFORDABLE ENERGY FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE, 2015, 75 : 495 - 501
  • [48] Low-cost housing developments in South Africa miss the opportunities for household level urban greening
    Shackleton, C. M.
    Hebinck, P.
    Kaoma, H.
    Chishaleshale, M.
    Chinyimba, A.
    Shackleton, S. E.
    Gambiza, J.
    Gumbo, D.
    [J]. LAND USE POLICY, 2014, 36 : 500 - 509
  • [49] Precarious welfare states: Urban struggles over housing delivery in post-apartheid South Africa
    Levenson, Zachary
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL SOCIOLOGY, 2017, 32 (04) : 474 - 492
  • [50] Pregnancy outcomes in HIV-infected and uninfected women in rural and urban South Africa
    Rollins, Nigel C.
    Coovadia, Hoosen M.
    Bland, Ruth M.
    Coutsoudis, Anna
    Bennish, Michael L.
    Patel, Deven
    Newell, Marie-Louise
    [J]. JAIDS-JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES, 2007, 44 (03) : 321 - 328