Post-War Progress: the Promise of Electricity to Transform British Kitchens
Guest blog by Orla Latham , University of Leeds In this blogpost I show how The Electrical Age magazine published by the Electrical Association for Women (EAW) provides insights into domestic innovation in the latter stages of the Second World War. Specifically, I look at volume 4 (1944-46) to examine how the EAW promoted the Bradford and Poplar model kitchens to show how electricity could transform kitchens into spaces of modernity and efficiency. I also offer guidance on how researchers can delve into the fully digitised Electrical Age – a key resource for understanding the technological and cultural shifts in post-war Britain – to uncover more about the intersection of technology, culture and everyday wartime life. As World War 2 approached its final phase and plans for D-Day developed…