Homes are often the site of research in business anthropology. The relatively brief time frames of much consumer research can lead to a perception of stability of space-time rather than one of indeterminacy and flux. In this article I explore examples of such flows in the home and how they are actively produced. Following Latour, Ingold, and other theorists, I examine the co-creation of “home” by human and non-human actors in order to destabilize the concept and to open our research to richer possibilities and greater habitability
Domestic life constitutes one of the primary concerns of the discipline of anthropology. Beginning w...
New Town challenges contemporary approaches to the study of space as cultural practice. This paper a...
Place is usually considered the backdrop for motion—the ‘where’ that people move to or from. Yet con...
How is home made and negotiated by the anthropologist? Secondly, how does the researcher relate to, ...
If asked to imagine home, most of us will come to think of a particular house or building. And, for ...
From the interior architecture to the furnishings and objects that inhabit it, a lived space plays a...
Place, space, and homeplace have taken on increasing conceptual significance for performance studies...
This paper examines the process of placemaking. It examines the differences between placemaking stra...
The built environment can be defined as the combination of built structures and modified landscapes ...
The notion of Home is universally understood, but has deeply personal and specific meaning for each ...
Despite anthropology’s longstanding fascination with the spaces and places of people’s lives, Gupta ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe theory explicated in Home: A Space Called Anywhere was b...
Using an auto-ethnographical approach with an arts practice-based methodology I examine in what ways...
This thesis is an exploration of the nature of home, and of the relationship between homes and selve...
This article is concerned with personal heritage and the role of material things in the construction...
Domestic life constitutes one of the primary concerns of the discipline of anthropology. Beginning w...
New Town challenges contemporary approaches to the study of space as cultural practice. This paper a...
Place is usually considered the backdrop for motion—the ‘where’ that people move to or from. Yet con...
How is home made and negotiated by the anthropologist? Secondly, how does the researcher relate to, ...
If asked to imagine home, most of us will come to think of a particular house or building. And, for ...
From the interior architecture to the furnishings and objects that inhabit it, a lived space plays a...
Place, space, and homeplace have taken on increasing conceptual significance for performance studies...
This paper examines the process of placemaking. It examines the differences between placemaking stra...
The built environment can be defined as the combination of built structures and modified landscapes ...
The notion of Home is universally understood, but has deeply personal and specific meaning for each ...
Despite anthropology’s longstanding fascination with the spaces and places of people’s lives, Gupta ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe theory explicated in Home: A Space Called Anywhere was b...
Using an auto-ethnographical approach with an arts practice-based methodology I examine in what ways...
This thesis is an exploration of the nature of home, and of the relationship between homes and selve...
This article is concerned with personal heritage and the role of material things in the construction...
Domestic life constitutes one of the primary concerns of the discipline of anthropology. Beginning w...
New Town challenges contemporary approaches to the study of space as cultural practice. This paper a...
Place is usually considered the backdrop for motion—the ‘where’ that people move to or from. Yet con...