Notes
I INTRODUCTION
1. Key works and collections on suburbanization include: Jackson, Crabgrass Frontier; Fishman, Bourgeois Utopias; Stilgoe, Borderland; Hise, Magnetic Los Angeles; Baxandall and Ewen, Picture Windows; Hayden, Building Suburbia; Wiese, Places of Their Own; Fogelson, Bourgeois Nightmares; Beauregard, When America Became Suburban; Kruse and Sugrue, New Suburban History; Wiese, Suburb Reader; and D. Harris, Little White Houses. See also specific case studies: Kelly, Expanding the American Dream; Wilson, Hamilton Park; Randall, Americaâs Original GI Town; and D. Harris, Second Suburb.
2. Anna Vemer Andrzejewski and Barbara Miller Lane have in-process manuscripts that investigate individual builders and various dimensions of the domestic building industry in postwar America. With âOne Builder: Marshall Erdman and Postwar Building and Real Estate Development in Madison, Wisconsin,â Andrzejewski will provide a deep study of a single builder, demonstrating how his business was shaped by period economics, government policy and zoning, architectural trends, and the building and design professions. Laneâs âHouses for a New World: Builders and Buyers in American Suburbs, 1945â1965â contains ten case-study developments built throughout the United States as a means of drawing conclusions about the building industry, its practices, and the purchasers of its houses.
3. Key works on the postwar domestic economy and consumerism include: Matthaei, Economic History of Women in America; E. T. May, Homeward Bound, particularly chapter 7; Hine, Populuxe; Cross, All-Consuming Century; Hurley, Diners, Bowling Alleys, and Trailer Parks; and Cohen, Consumersâ Republic.
4. For more on the intersections of race, class, and the suburban home, see D. Harris, Little White Houses.
5. For postwar houses as part of broader studies, see G. Wright, Building the Dream; C. E. Clark, American Family Home; Archer, Architecture and Suburbia; Isenstadt, Modern American House; and Hubka, Houses without Names.
6. Jeffrey Hornstein argues that the tendency for many Americans to consider themselves âmiddle classâ was well in place at the outset of World War II. See Hornstein, Nation of Realtors, 201â6.
7. Key texts on women and families in the postwar period include: Matthaei, Economic History of Women in America; Cowan, More Work for Mother; E. T. May, Homeward Bound; Coontz, Way We Never Were; and Spigel, Make Room for TV.
8. âTodayâs Woman Selects Colors of Roof Shingles,â Washington Post, 18 Feb. 1961, sec. B: 15.
9. âWhy Buyers Buy,â 54.
10. â22 Ways to Get More Sales from a Model House,â 148.
11. For more on mid-twentieth-century suburban development and domestic design in these countries, see Stretton, Ideas for Australian Cities; Irving, History and Design of the Australian House; Ferguson, Building the New Zealand Dream; R. Harris, Unplanned Suburbs; Pickett, Fibro Frontier; R. Harris, Creeping Conformity; Jenkins, At Home; Schrader, We Call It Home; and OâCallaghan and Pickett, Designer Suburbs.
12. For 1945 to 1964, see U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census (Census Bureau), Housing Construction Statistics, 1889 to 1964, 18; for 1965 to 1970, see Census Bureau and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Characteristics of New One-Family Homes: 1974, 4.
13. There is no single sou...