"In this fascinating probe of the familiar suburban tract homes of the post–World War II era, Dianne Harris powerfully conveys how race and class were inscribed on the new metropolitan landscape. White middle-class America was born and raised in suburbia, a legacy we still live with today."-Lizabeth Cohen, author of A Consumers’ Republic: The Politics of Mass Consumption in Postwar America"Impressively interdisciplinary and marvelously attentive to telling details, intimate lives, and social structures, Dianne Harris joins Dolores Hayden, Gwendolyn Wright, and others in making the architecture and landscape of everyday lives illuminate the workings of an entire historical period. Little White Houses is a blockbuster contribution to the critical study of whiteness and to the history of the United States after World War II."-David Roediger, author of How Race Survived U.S. History: From Settlement and Slavery to the Obama Phenomenon"Harris has contributed a major shift in perspective toward new and important ways to understand the history of postwar housing in the United States."-Antipode"Little White Houses establishes a clearly articulated framework which future studies may be informed..., general readers and academics alike should take great interest in her provocative and groundbreaking book."-Art Libraries Society of North America (ARLiS/NA)"Highly recommended."-Choice"Harris’ book should motivate scholarly discussions and discourse for continued work toward creation of a more civil American society."-Journal of Family & Consumer Sciences"[Harris’s] nuanced conception of the relationship between perceptions of racial identity, the federal systems of real estate financing, and the ways in which individual cultural choices defined the physical spaces associated with he single-family home is thoughtful and well-executed. However, the crucial correction to architectural histories that overlook the myriad roles race played in assumptions about design consistently marks the fundamental excellence of the text."-American Historical Review"[Harris] powerfully conveys the idea that socially conditioned personal, family, and even national identities are fashioned as much from material and spatial configurations of the home as from explicit political and cultural beliefs."-Journal of Architectural Education"Little White Houses is both lots of fun and incredibly valuable."-American Studies"Harris’s ingenuity in teasing out radical modern innovation, rapid historical change, and insidious ideological operations from the most mundane and familiar objects and arrangements is fascinating."-Traditional Dwellings & Settlements Review"Little White Houses offers an important contribution to the fields of suburban studies and whiteness studies, as well as to architectural history as a whole, providing a fresh look at the racial and classed dimensions of space and its representation and promotion during the postwar era."-Journal of American Studies"Few scholars have so effectively drawn attention to the most unremarkable aspects of the built environment. Harris has produced a book that will be sure to engage readers and influence scholarship for many years to come."-Buildings & Landscapes"An excellent look into the crucial role the spaces of the home played in American identity formation and, more specifically, how those identities were strongly shaped by the narrow vision of home life in the postwar world."-H-Net Reviews