HOMInG Interview (original) (raw)
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Saving home from the pitfalls of the home, through homing - WP 1_17
The home holds an inclusive and supportive potential for vulnerable people which is both critical and under-explored. In order to advance research into it, this paper interrogates the material, relational and emotional conditions under which a particular domestic space is indeed a source of feeling-at-home for its dwellers. Such an exercise starts from a deconstruction of the ideological representations of the home as a necessarily and naturally " good " entity which, as such, should not be discussed, let alone researched, further. This commonsensical view touches deep chords and emotional needs in people's everyday life. Nonetheless, much critical literature has led to more reflexive and nuanced views of what home means to whom, inviting to study the protective and inclusionary scope of the home as an empirical question, rather than (only) a normative ideal. While the human need to feel somehow at home seems to apply anywhere, regardless of social or cultural backgrounds, whether and how a domestic setting does overlap with home – as a distinctive source of security, familiarity and control – is a major research and policy issue. By revisiting the transdisciplinary debate on " home studies " , and based on my current research on home and mobility, this paper argues for a novel understanding of the environmental, family and personal variables which can turn a dwelling into a home; a complex, but critical transition for an empirically-based view of home to inform health and social care.
"Home" as an essentially contested concept and why this matters
Housing Studies
This paper makes two interlinked arguments. First, that the "concept of home"-the focus of a burgeoning literature within housing studies-meets Gallie's conditions for an "essentially contested concept." The influential theory, drawn on throughout the social sciences, seeks to explain concepts for which disputes are intractable; they cannot be settled by empirical evidence or argument. Second, that this "essential contestability" is not just a theoretical label, it tells us something useful about how scholars can best employ the concept of home in their own work. The argument is put in three sections. The first provides a summary of Gallie's theory. The second argues that the concept of home meets Gallie's conditions for essential contestability. Finally, the third outlines the implications of the arguments put in the first two sections for scholars engaging with the concept of home.
Seeking Home: Vignettes of Homes and Homing
The Case for Reduction, 2022
The question of home is a complicated one. While home is emplaced, the notion of home does not simply point to just a location. This chapter thus utilizes what I call the trope of the ‘vignette’ to look at the concept of home in order to identify some aspects of what constitutes and/or (re)creates it for displaced individuals. It does so by performing a close reading of key moments in the film Salt of this Sea by Annemarie Jacir and the collection of essays The Idea of Home by John Hughes.
Homing : navigating the notions of home
2017
This thesis investigates the complexities of home through the exploration of the embodiment of architecture, both human and non-human. I see the notion of home as a multifarious, visceral experience; therefore my investigation is informed by my own lived experience. I investigate the notion of home in terms of locale, history, identity and memory. My argument is informed by two phenomenological texts, namely The Soul of the White Ant by South African poet Eugene Marais and The Poetics of Space by French philosopher Gaston Bachelard. I investigate these texts as well as the work of three selected South African contemporary artists, namely Nicholas Hlobo, Joani Groenewald and Zanele Muholi, in conjunction with my own artistic practice. I demonstrate the concept of home as navigating through time and space by employing the use of narrative in this thesis and the particular configuration of my art installations. ii Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za
Home in Question Uncovering Meanings, Desires and Dilemmas of Non-home
European Journal of Cultural Studies, 2021
What is the opposite of home? Is it necessarily something 'negative'? Similar questions, far from having a self-evident answer, make for a fruitful entry point for research into the social experience of home. Central to this article is a novel conceptualisation of non-home, against the background of the pre-existing criticisms of the normative, romanticized and de-politicized understandings of home. This article draws from fieldwork on the everyday dwelling experience of migrants and asylum seekers to illustrate the volitional dimension of non-home. Not attaching a sense of home to a dwelling place or set of relationships is not merely consequence of poor housing conditions. It may also involve an active choiceat least at some points of the life course, in certain household conditions. In this sense, nonhome is more than a matter of absence, dispossession, reconfiguration or implosion of home. In questioning the normative view of home as inherently positive and desirable, this conceptualisation highlights the reciprocal interact ion between home and non-home as mutually interdependent constructs.
Shehayeb, D., Turgut Yildiz, H. & Kellett, P. (Eds.) (2007). The Appropriate Home: Can We Design “Appropriate” Residential Environments? HBRC: Cairo, Egypt. Proceedings of the First HBRC & IAPS-CSBE Network Joint Symposium (ISBN 977-17-4798-3)., 2007
Whilst most designers think of home as a physical private space; this definition of home leaves a large portion of ‘home environments’ unaccounted for, and therefore overlooked by the design professions. The results are misuse, alterations and increasing stress. To understand the socio-psychological processes that relate to the function of dwelling, and how they are influenced by design, one has to draw on knowledge from different fields, and in order to provide compatible concepts useful in the design process, a multidisciplinary approach is required. The objective of this paper is to present a theoretical framework integrating findings from disparate studies that address: perceptions of the designed environment, the relation between the perceived environment and behavior, and those that relate socio-psychological processes to physical characteristics and users in the home environment, including the particularities of the Egyptian case to capture the fundamentals of the appropriate home. A literature review led to the identifying the key issues related to the design of home environment and complementing them with the Egyptian empirical studies. Based on this analysis, a comprehensive model was developed addressing the problem of designing the appropriate home as a function of its users' characteristics, their needs, and behavior.
Home Rediscovered in Embodied Space/Time, Emotion, Imagination and the Human Animal
Home - Lived Experiences, editors John Murungi and Linda Ardito, 2021
The phenomenology of home requires a different notion of embodiment, perception, space/time, imagination, and animality. Home is in lived space, a deep psychic structure, and a dialogue with built structures and the natural world. Home requires cultivation that can increase our sense of belonging, shelter, direction and purpose. Home shows us trajectories of the back and forth dialogue with the inanimate world, deep past, ancestors, qualities of the things, animals and the natural world. Home is key to dwelling in space in a centered way and appropriating the deep past. The meaning of home can lead to social efforts at providing homes and deepening ecological and historical awareness.