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Female Agency in the British Ministry of Education: Mary Medd''s Contribution to School Design (1949-1972)

Author(s):
ORCID
Medium: journal article
Language(s): English
Published in: Architectural Histories, , n. 1, v. 12
DOI: 10.16995/ah.10527
Abstract:

This paper describes and discusses architect Mary Medd’s input into school development within the Ministry of Education, responsible for England and Wales, during the post-war era, highlighting her agency and capacity to provide significant change in the discipline of architecture. Mary Medd’s contributions were outcast on two fronts: first, by an institutional framework that prioritised anonymous civil service expertise, thereby suppressing individual attribution, and second, as one half of a prosperous partnership, both professional and personal, with David Medd. Although the collective processes that inexorably characterise the work dynamics within public institutions normally imply that any attribution to a single person is ambiguous, this paper suggests that the institutional framework should not be interpreted as a hindrance to the recognition of Mary Medd’s authorship. Through archival work, and focusing on her design proposals, the Ministry of Education is interpreted as the very place where she decided to develop her agency as a woman, deeply engaged in education and architecture, to pursue the complete reconfiguration of school design in a national level. The ministry offered a place for the development of a different kind of architectural practice where her individual agency could be exercised both as a designer of spatial layouts and as the main catalyst of a holistic interdisciplinary collaboration. The paper embarks on a mission to reevaluate and celebrate Mary Medd’s crucial role in the evolution of education architecture through an analysis of her diaries, notebooks, and drawings. In addition to repositioning Mary Medd within the annals of architectural history, this research aims to contribute to the ongoing historiography of feminist research methods and ideologies within the field. By shedding light on the gendered disparities in architectural history and emphasising the importance of acknowledging women’s contributions, this study adds to the broader conversation on gender equity in design and education, ultimately enriching our understanding of the multifaceted history of architectural practice.

Structurae cannot make the full text of this publication available at this time. The full text can be accessed through the publisher via the DOI: 10.16995/ah.10527.
  • About this
    data sheet
  • Reference-ID
    10809906
  • Published on:
    17/01/2025
  • Last updated on:
    17/01/2025
 
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