Prefabricated kitchen designs were implemented in the United States with rational-space and labor saving principles. These spaces were designed specifically with the suburban housewife in mind. The form and function of the advertised kitchen conflicted with the reality of a housewife. Levittown kitchens used commercialism and capitalism to promote domestic life.
Citations:
"Building the Suburban Dream: The Levittown Kitchen." Levittown, Pa. Building the Suburban Dream. The State Museum of Pennsylvania, 1 Jan. 2003. Web.
Harris, Dianne. "9. Pink Kitchens for Little Boxes: The Evolution of 1950s Kitchen Design in Levittown." Second Suburb: Levittown, Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh, PA: U of Pittsburgh, 2010. 243-80. Print.
Hellman, Caroline. "The Other American Kitchen: Alternative Domesticity in 1950s Design, Politics, and Fiction." Americana: The Journal of American Popular Culture (1900-present). 1 Sept. 2004. Web. 08 Mar. 2016.
Kelly, Barbara M. Expanding the American Dream: Building and Rebuilding Levittown. Albany: State U of New York, 1993. Print.
Lane, Barbara Miller. "Mass Housing as a Single-family Dwelling: The Post-war American Suburb." Housing and Dwelling: Perspective on Modern Domestic Architecture. New York: Routledge, 2007. 272-309. Print.
Meck, Stuart. “Reflections on Levittown.” Planning 75, no. 2 (February 2009): 54–54.
Image Citation:
1. http://statemuseumpa.org/levittown/images/lg_jpegs/GE-ad.jpg
2. http://statemuseumpa.org/levittown/images/lg_jpegs/colorful-kitchens.jpg
3. http://statemuseumpa.org/levittown/images/lg_jpegs/open.jpg