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Washing Machines Make Lazy WomenDomestic Appliances and the Negotiation of Womens Propriety in SowetoUniversity of Cape Town, South Africa, hmeintjes{at}yahoo.com This article explores the multiple symbolic associations of two domestic appliances - the washing machine and the coal stove - in a neighbourhood in Soweto, South Africa, and examines the ways in which these appliances as symbolic objects are integral in the construction and negotiation of womens proper roles and relations. The (in some cases incoherent) multivalence of the appliances sets them up as ideal sites for contestation over the definition of desirable gender roles and identity. An examination of peoples attitudes towards, and actions around, these two appliances is thus revealing of their own notions of gender propriety.
Key Words: domestic appliances gender roles proper womanhood Soweto symbolic meaning
Journal of Material Culture, Vol. 6, No. 3,
345-363 (2001) This article has been cited by other articles:
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