Newly Released: Exploring Gender in Vernacular Architecture


Join author Jessica E. Sewell for a book talk on Friday March 21, 2025 hosted by the UVA School of Architecture —
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Chrisman sisters, 1886, in front of their sod house in Nebraska
Sod House. The Chrisman sisters, 1886, in front of their sod house in Nebraska. Photograph by Solomon Butcher, courtesy of Nebraska State Historical Society Photograph Collection (courtesy of author).

Author: Jessica Ellen Sewell
February 2025
University of Tennessee Press

In Exploring Gender in Vernacular Architecture, Jessica Ellen Sewell considers the gender of those who create and shape spaces, how gender ideology contributes to and manifests itself in built form, and what research methods make the observation of gendered experience possible. She discusses single-gender, mixed-gender, and queer spaces, providing a comprehensive look at how gender influences the design and construction of those spaces, how those spaces are used, and the relationship between gender and the broader architectural landscape. In her study, Sewell also provides an expansive view of how gender intersects with other categories of power and difference, such as race, class, and age, and how this intersectionality contributes to the design and use of built spaces.

Exploring Gender in Vernacular Architecture Book Cover

In addition to examining the spaces themselves, Sewell explores research methods for studying gendered experiences in architecture. She argues that traditional research methods in vernacular architecture studies, which often focus on building-based fieldwork, should be complemented by other methods—such as letters, oral histories, and diaries—that expand the understanding of buildings beyond their construction date and reveal how those buildings have been used and represented over time. 

Digging into primary records, Sewell posits, 
can help challenge our assumptions about who
influences architecture and urban development, 
illuminating  the roles of women and others in the 
building and shaping of space.


Thoroughly researched yet accessible for scholars new to the study of vernacular architecture, Exploring Gender in Vernacular Architecture bridges the gap between specialized scholarship and broader public understanding. Students of architectural history, gender studies, and cultural history will find it a valuable resource not only for examining the relationship between gender and architecture, but for engaging new methodological tools that may further their own research.

This title is available in Print and Kindle editions (see link below).

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Jessica Sewell
   

Author

Jessica Ellen Sewell is an associate professor of urban and environmental planning and architectural history at the University of Virginia. She is the author of Women and the Everyday City: Public Space in San Francisco, 1890–1915.


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