The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Food Studies is available via subscription and perpetual access from the 23rd of October 2024. Discover how each Oxford Research Encyclopedia is developed, read about the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Food Studies, meet its editorial board, and find out how to subscribe.
Dismiss

 1-1 of 1 Results

  • Keywords: home economics x
Clear all

Article

Home Economics, Domesticity, and Housework  

Megan J. Elias

Home economics is an interdisciplinary combination of fields including laboratory and social sciences to study the phenomena of home life and thereby improve people’s everyday lives. It emerged in the late 19th century in the United States as an academic field of study, primarily at Land Grant universities. Demographics of the field, for both faculty and students, have remained predominantly female since its beginnings. Subfields of Home Economics, some of which have developed into independent fields of study, are nutrition, dietetics, food science, textile science, child psychology, and institutional management. The federal government in the United States supported home economics teaching and research through both the Department of Education and the Department of Agriculture. In colleges and universities, the field is now primarily known as family and consumer sciences, reflecting changes in the methodologies and philosophy of the field over the course of the 20th century. A central issue in the field has been how to empower individuals to navigate the consumer economy in their own best interest.