Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Post-War Housing in Canada (40s, 50s)
- Themes
- What kind of Canada did we want?
- Changing ideals
- Rural at first, but as the economy developed we wanted more urban
- Industrial age, urbanization
- Urbanization
- Gender roles
- Regional differences
- Changing societal ideals
- Post-war Canadians hoped
for a better life
- Prosperity
- high employment
- More gov support
- Role of women
- Equality: Not considered
inferior to men, had unique
qualities
- Were responsible for family
survival and happiness
- Men were "weaker", women had
to act happy and cater to their
needs
- Men got first access to
money, women had to make
sacrifices
- Sexuality
- Alfred Kinsey wrote a book on this
- Women's erotic
potential was now
included in domestic
ideal
- Active sexuality considered a
prerequisite for satisfactory
personal and marital life
- Gender roles are
considered a result of
different anatomy
- Jobs
- Increase in labour force participation
- Unequal opportunities and wages
- Domestic life was still primary duty
- Working was an investment into a
more ideal and domestic future
- Double day: Still had to work at home after job
- Wives acted as unpaid assistants to further husband careers
- Suburbs
- Didn't cater to women's needs
- Only connected to community through
- Communal child-centered activities
- Volunteering with local institutions
- Activism to better community
- Often seen as victims and authors of own misfortune
- Capitalism
- Private consumption was the first
defence against communism (proof
os capitalism's success)
- The ideal family/ home
- Cons
- Men ignored family and emotional needs
- Overly materialistic
- Didn't really contribute to greater community
- Rural
- Nuclear Family
- 2 acres min
- Bc gov didn't want this to become urban housing
- Self-sufficiency
- Capitalist
- Male breadwinner
- Shift
- Don't want to be farmers
- Want less than 2 acres, closer to city
- How do these ideals affect housing policy?
- Difference between anticipated ideals and changing ideals
- Rural --> More city-oriented ideal
- Government spending
- Extension of the welfare state
- Result of changing
expectations regarding
government responsibility
- Not everyone benefited from state support
- National housing act required
higher incomes to pay
down-payments and interst
- Focus on suburbs, not reclamation of aging housing
- Aging housing was crowded
- This created social disarray
- People feared family breakdown from this
- Vets protested lack of housing
- CMHC fails to provide new housing in cities
- Suburban built environment affects:
- Who lives there
- Crime
- Health/ Happiness
- Infrastructure
- Education
- Values
- Resources
- Public housing
- Context
- White flight
- CA lacked the racial divides present in US
- Large scale migration of
white residents to more
racially homogenous living
areas
- Was not as influential as in US
- Suburbia was more racially diverse/
less homogenous. Backgrounds of
suburban residents varied by province
- But homogeneity was still supported, and race was
frequently used as a criteria by land developers
- Red Menace
- Fear of rise of communism
- Decline in rural population
- Baby Boom
- Suburbia
- Suburban experiment
was fuelled by high birth
rates
- Increased home-based
responsibilities
- Layout
- Child-centered (required maternal leadership), encouraged family time
- Lots of driving = harder to have joint
parental efforts (only one car)
- Not a lot of common space; little attention to women's needs
- Uniform housing
- Canada Mortgage and Housing
Corporation inspection and zoning
laws
- Car-culture
Anmerkungen:
- Distance from work
Few intersections
Cul-de-sacs
Driveways
Many parking lots
Lack of sidewalks
- Accidental green spaces
- Originally why people moved here
- Start to disappear with new developments
- Gov has to start planning
- Infrastructure and policy have large
impacts on society, social norms, and
development
- General Info
- Veterans Land Act (WWII)
Anmerkungen:
- After WWI, there was the Soldier's Settlement Act
- Assumptions of policy makers affect policy
- Research more
- People
- Betty Friedman
(the Feminine
Mystique)
- Challenged the claim that men and women were equal
- Thought suburbs consigned women to subordination and frustration
- Associated women with evils of modern society
- Ignores the complexity of their lives
- Upper-middle class
- Hansa Mehta
- Delegate on UN human
rights commission
- Fought for gender equality
- John Humphrey
- Wrote 1st draft of
declaration on human
rights
- Oil fields (1947)
- Leduc, major crude oil discovery
- Created boom in oil exploration and exports
- Contradicting forms of feminism
- Depended on class