This book, which fills a gap on the materiality of lived relations, examines households within the context of their immediate physical surroundings of home and shows how human interactions are reflected in built forms. Houses are dynamic participants in family life in many ways. They often pre-date the origins and outlast the life spans of their inhabitants, but they can exert a powerful influence on the organization of behaviors and the values of family members, as well as on the forms and flows of family life across the generations. Constituting wealth, investment, security and inheritance, they are an objective in and of themselves in many domestic strategies. Drawing on developments within anthropology, archaeology, architecture and social history, the authors demonstrate, through detailed case studies, how household or family relations can usefully be mined to re-situate social theory in both space and time. Space, boundaries, family cycles, historic changes, migration patterns, ethnicity, memory and gender are all interrogated for the light they shed on how people interact with the physical world around them and what this means culturally and symbolically. Europe is an especially rich focus for this kind of analysis because it is distinguished by its long, well-documented history and a recent period of intense change.
You’re item was added to pickup at [location]
You’re [amount] away from FREE shipping!
You qualify for FREE shipping!
Translation missing: en.settings.free_shipping_default_message
House Life: Space, Place and Family in Europe
Paperback
$71.50
Promotional Details
Others Also Bought
Previous
Next
Published date: Apr 14, 1999
Language: English
No. of Pages: 280
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
ISBN: 9781859732359
Dimensions:
6.2" W x
0.64" L x
9.23" H
Donna Birdwell-Pheasant, Lamar University Denise Lawrence-Züniga, California State Polytechnic University
"This collection of essays provides an interesting and vital contribution to the meager literature on the materiality of lived relations between houses and families." --Journal of European Area Studies
"House Life sets forth an example for further developments in the anthropology of space, and its highly accessible style makes it an ideal course reader and introductory text for students of both anthropology and architecture." --Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
You May Also Like
Previous
Next
Recently Viewed
Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
Opens in a new window.
eBooks from Indigo are available at Kobo.com
Simply sign in or create your free Kobo account to get started. Read eBooks on any Kobo eReader or with the free Kobo App.
Why Kobo?
With over 6 million of the world's best eBooks to choose from, Kobo offers you a whole world of reading. Go shelf-less with your library and enjoy reward points with every purchase.