Ali Madanipour. 2003. ‘Personal Space of the Body’. Pp. 6–38 in Public and private spaces of the city. London: Routledge.
Allen, S., and C. Wolkowitz. 1987. ‘Approaches to Homeworking’. Pp. 10–29 in Homeworking: myths and realities. Vol. Women in society. Basingstoke: Macmillan Education.
Anderson , B. 2000. ‘Dr Jekyll and Mrs Hyde: Defining Domestic Work’. Pp. 9–27 in Doing the dirty work?: the global politics of domestic labour. London: Zed Books.
Bell, D., and G. Valentine . 1997. ‘Home’. Pp. 60–87 in Consuming geographies: we are where we eat. London: Routledge.
Bondi, Liz. 1998. ‘Gender, Class and Urban Space: Public and Private Space in Contemporary Urban Landscapes’. Urban Geography 19(2):160–85. doi: 10.2747/0272-3638.19.2.160.
Boys, J., and Matrix. 1984. ‘House Design and Women’s Roles’. Pp. 55–80 in Making space: women and the man-made environment. London: Pluto Press.
Casteras, S. 1987. ‘Of Queens’ Gardens" and the Model Victorian Lady’. Pp. 50–73 in Images of Victorian womanhood in English art. London: Associate University Presses.
Cockburn, Cynthia, and Ruža First-Dilić. 1994. ‘Introduction: Looking for the Gender-Technology Relation’. Pp. 1–21 in Bringing technology home: gender and technology in a changing Europe. Buckingham [England]: Open University Press.
Cohen, Deborah. 2006. ‘Cathedrals to Commerce: Shoppers and Entrepreneurs’. Pp. 32–62 in Household gods: the British and their possessions. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Cowan, Ruth Schwartz. 1983. ‘The Roads Not Taken: Alternative Social and Technical Approaches to Housework’. Pp. 102-150-241–45 in More work for mother: the ironies of household technology from the open hearth to the microwave. New York: Basic Books.
Daniels, Cynthia R. 1989. ‘Between Home and Factory: Homeworkers and the State’. Pp. 13–32 in Homework: historical and contemporary perspectives on paid labor at home. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
Davidoff , L. 1990. ‘The Rationalisation of Housework’. Pp. 59–94 in Sexual divisions revisited. London: Macmillan published in association with the British Sociological Association.
Davidoff, L. 1998. ‘Regarding Some ’old Husbands’ Tales’: Public and Private in Feminist History’. Pp. 164–94 in Feminism, the public and the private. Vol. Oxford readings in feminism. New York: Oxford University Press.
Davidoff, Leonore. 1995. ‘Landscape with Figures: Home and Community in English Society’. Pp. 41–72 in Worlds between: historical perspectives on gender and class. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Davidoff, Leonore, and Catherine Hall. 2002. ‘My Own Fireside: The Creation of the Middle-Class Home’. Pp. 357–96 in Family fortunes: [men and women of the English middle class, 1780-1850]. London: Routledge.
Davidson , C. 1982. ‘Women’s Attitudes to Housework’. in A woman’s work is never done: a history of housework in the British Isles 1650-1950. London: Chatto & Windus.
Duncan, Nancy. 1996. ‘Negotiating Gender and Sexuality in Public and Private Spaces’. Pp. 127–45 in Body space: destabilising geographies of gender and sexuality. London: Routledge.
Fassinger, Polly. 1993. ‘Meanings of Housework for Single Fathers and Mothers’. Pp. 195–216 in Men, work, and family. Vol. Research on men and masculinities series. London: Sage Publications.
Gamarnikow, Eva, and June Purvis. 1983. ‘Introduction’. Pp. 1–6 in The Public and the private. London: Heinemann.
Giles, J. 2004. ‘Legacies: The Question of “home” and Women’s Modernity’. Pp. 141–65 in The parlour and the suburb: domestic identities, class, femininity and modernity. Oxford: Berg.
Gill Valentine. 1990. ‘Women’s Fear and the Design of Public Space’. Built Environment 16(4):288–303.
Gillis, J. 1997. ‘No Place like Home’. Pp. 109–28 in A world of their own making: a history of myth and ritual in family life. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Godard , F. 1985. ‘How Do Ways of Life Change?’ Pp. 317–37 in Beyond employment: household, gender and subsistence. Oxford: Blackwell.
Gregson, Nicky, and Michelle Lowe. 1994. ‘Theoretical and Political Reflections’. Pp. 231–41 in Servicing the middle classes: class, gender and waged domestic labour in contemporary Britain. Vol. International studies of women and place. London: Routledge.
Gregson, Nicky, and Michelle Lowe. 2008. ‘Renegotiating the Domestic Division of Labour? A Study of Dual Career Households in North East and South East England’. The Sociological Review 41(3):475–505. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-954X.1993.tb00074.x.
Hayden, D. 1981. ‘Community Kitchens and Cooked Food Services’. Pp. 206–27 in The grand domestic revolution: a history of feminist designs for American homes, neighborhoods, and cities. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
Heynen, H. 2005. ‘Modernity and Domesticity:Tensions and Contradictions’. Pp. 1–29 in Negotiating domesticity: spatial productions of gender in modern architecture. London: Routledge.
Honig, Elizabeth Alice. 1997. ‘Space of Gender in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting’. Pp. 187–201 in Looking at seventeenth-century Dutch art: realism reconsidered. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hooks, B. 1990. ‘Homeplace: A Site of Resistance’. Pp. 41–49 in Yearning: race, gender, and culture. Toronto: Between the Lines.
Hunt , P. 1989. ‘Gender and the Constuction of Home Life’. Pp. 66–81 in Home and family: creating the domestic sphere. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
Johnston, L., and G. Valentine . 1994. ‘Wherever I Lay My Girlfriend, Thats My Home: The Performance and Surveillance of Lesbian Identities in Domestic Environments’. Pp. 99–113 in Mapping desire: geographies of sexualities. London: Routledge.
Linda J. Nicholson. 1989. ‘Feminist Theory: The Private and the Public’. Pp. 221–30 in Beyond domination: new perspectives on women and philosophy. Vol. New feminist perspectives series. Totowa, N.J: Rowman & Littlefield.
Little et. al. , Jo. 1988. ‘Introduction: Geography and Gender in the Urban Environment’. Pp. 1–20 in Women in cities: gender and the urban environment. Vol. Women in society. Basingstoke: Macmillan Education.
Madigan, Ruth, Moira Munro, and Susan J. Smith. 1990. ‘Gender and the Meaning of the Home’. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 14(4):625–47. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2427.1990.tb00160.x.
Mary Romero. 1992. ‘Bonds of Sisterhood - Bonds of Oppression’. Pp. 97–133 in Maid in the U.S.A. Vol. Perspectives on gender. New York: Routledge.
McDowell, Linda. 1999. ‘Home, Place and Identity’. Pp. 71–95 in Gender, identity and place: understanding feminist geographies. Cambridge: Polity.
McDowell, Linda. 2009. ‘Up Close and Personal: Intimate Work in the Home’. Pp. 79–98 in Working bodies: interactive service employment and workplace identities. Vol. Studies in urban and social change. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
McDowell, Linda, and Rosemary Pringle. 1992. ‘Defining Public and Private Issues’. Pp. 9–17 in Defining women: Social institutions and gender divisions. Cambridge: Polity Press.
McNay, Lois. 2000. ‘Gender, Subjectification and Agency: Introductory Remarks’. Pp. 1–21 in Gender and agency: reconfiguring the subject in feminist and social theory. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Monk , Janice. 1992. ‘Gender in the Landscape: Expression of Power and Meaning’. Pp. 124–37 in Inventing places: studies in cultural geography. New York: Wiley.
Oakley, A. 1974. ‘Socialization and Self-Concept’. Pp. 113–34 in The sociology of housework. London: Martin Robertson.
Phil Hubbard. 2005. ‘Women Outdoors : Destabilizing the Public / Private Dichotomy’. Pp. 322–33 in A companion to feminist geography. Vol. Blackwell companions to geography. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Pollock, Griselda. 1988. ‘Modernity and the Spaces of Femininity’. Pp. 50–90 in Vision and difference: femininity, feminism and histories of art. London: Routledge.
Pratt, G. 1998. ‘Geographic Metaphors in Feminist Theory’. Pp. 13–30 in Making worlds: gender, metaphor, materiality. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Prugl, E. 1999. ‘Motherly Women-Breadwinning Men: Industrial Homework and the Construction of Western Welfare States’. Pp. 25–55 in The global construction of gender: home-based work in the political economy of the 20th century. New York: Columbia University Press.
Reed , C. 1996. ‘Introduction: Not at Home’. Pp. 7–17 in Not at home: the suppression of domesticity in modern art and architecture. London: Thames and Hudson.
Rivas, L. M. 2003. ‘Invisible Labours: Caring for the Independent Person’. Pp. 70–84 in Global woman: nannies, maids and sex workers in the new economy. London: Granta Books.
Rose , G. 1993. ‘Women and Everyday Spaces’. Pp. 17–40 in Feminism and geography: the limits of geographical knowledge. London: Polity Press.
Rybczynski, W. 1986. ‘Domesticity ’. Pp. 51–75 in Home: a short history of an idea. New York, N.Y., U.S.A.: Viking.
Sibley, D. 2005. ‘Private/Public’. Pp. 155–60 in Cultural geography: a critical dictionary of key concepts. Vol. International library of human geography. London: I.B. Tauris.
Soja, E. M. 1996. ‘Increasing the Openness of Thirdspace’. Pp. 106–44 in Thirdspace: journeys to Los Angeles and other real-and-imagined places. Cambridge, Mass: Blackwell.
Sutton, P. C. 1988. ‘The Domestic Life of Women’. Pp. 68–75 in Pieter de Hooch, 1629-1684. London: Dulwich Picture Gallery, Wadsworth Atheneum in association with Yale University Press.
Thorne , B. 1992. ‘Feminist Rethinking the Family: An Overview’. Pp. 1-21, – 24 in Rethinking the family: some feminist questions. Boston: Northeastern University Press.
Thornton , M. 1995. ‘The Cartography of Public and Private’. Pp. 2–16 in Public and private: feminist legal debates. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
Tosh, J. 1999. ‘The Ideal of Domesticity’. Pp. 27–50 in A man’s place: masculinity and the middle-class home in Victorian England. London: Yale University Press.
Wolff, J. 2006. ‘Gender and the Haunting of Cities (or, the Retirement of the Flaneur)’. Pp. 18–31 in The invisible flâneuse?: gender, public space, and visual culture in nineteenth-century Paris. Vol. Critical perspectives in art history. Manchester: Manchester University Press.