Selling Mrs. Consumer
eBook - PDF

Selling Mrs. Consumer

Christine Frederick and the Rise of Household Efficiency

  1. 290 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Selling Mrs. Consumer

Christine Frederick and the Rise of Household Efficiency

Book details
Table of contents
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About This Book

This first book-length treatment of the life and work of Christine Frederick (1883-1970) reveals an important dilemma that faced educated women of the early twentieth century. Contrary to her professional role as home efficiency expert, advertising consultant, and consumer advocate, Christine Frederick espoused the nineteenth-century ideal of preserving the virtuous home—and a woman's place in it. In an effort to reconcile her desire to succeed in the public sphere of modernization and consumerism with the knowledge that most middle-class Americans still held traditional beliefs about gender roles, Frederick fashioned a career for herself that encouraged other women to remain at home.

With the rise of home economics and scientific management, Frederick—college-educated but confined to the drudgery of housework—devised a plan for bringing the public sphere into the domestic. Her home would become her factory. She learned how to standardize tasks by observing labor-saving devices in industry and then applied this knowledge to housework. She standardized dishwashing, for example, by breaking the job into three separate operations: scraping and stacking, washing, and drying and putting away. Determined to train women to become proficient homemakers and efficient managers, Frederick secured a job writing articles for the Ladies' Home Journal. A professional career as home efficiency expert later expanded to include advertising consultant and consumer advocate. Frederick assured male advertisers that she knew women well and promised to help them sell to "Mrs. Consumer."

While Frederick sought the power and influence available only to men, she promoted a division of labor by gender and therefore served the fall of the early-twentieth-century wave of feminism. Rutherford's engaging account of Christine Frederick's life reflects a dilemma that continues to affect women today—whether to seek professional gratification or adhere to traditional family values.

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Yes, you can access Selling Mrs. Consumer by Janice Rutherford in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Social Science Biographies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Preface
  3. Prologue
  4. Introduction
  5. І. "Only a Girl,"
  6. 2. "Drudgifying Housework,"
  7. 3. The Rise of Home Economics and Scientific Management
  8. 4. Conceiving a Career
  9. 5. Promoting Industry to Save the Home
  10. 6. Expounding the Business Ethic
  11. 7. Accommodating Progressivism
  12. 8. "A World Wide Lecturer,"
  13. 9. Reframing Women's Role in the Twenties
  14. 10. Becoming Mrs. Consumer
  15. 11. Priva te Life
  16. 12. Selling Out Mrs. Consumer
  17. 13. The Twilight of a Career
  18. 14. Re-creation and Legacy
  19. Epilogue
  20. Appendix: Chronology of Christine Frederick's Life
  21. Notes
  22. Bibliography
  23. Index