Designing Homeliness: Everyday Practices of Care proposes an interdisciplinary lens to investigate home. The book situates homeliness as a continual process of creating, maintaining, and restoring meanings and experiences of home. Melisa Duque draws from her design ethnographic practice with people using smart home lighting, gardening, jigsaw puzzles, and op-shopping to present everyday examples in dialogue with theoretical discussions, revealing the role of homeliness in generating wellbeing. The research projects featured in this book were conducted in rural, regional, remote, and metropolitan areas in Australia, at familiar and unfamiliar living sites, including people's homes, a mental health hospital unit, a residential aged care facility, and a charity shop revaluing domestic things. This book offers conceptualisations and practical tools to advance home studies while engaging with broader discussions on ageing, wellbeing, and sustainability. Led by design research and social science analysis, this book will be of value for students, researchers, and practitioners at these intersections, including design, anthropology, and human geography.
ISBN: | 9781032136387 |
Publication date: | 7th October 2024 |
Author: | Melisa Duque |
Publisher: | Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 148 pages |
Series: | Home |
Genres: |
Social and cultural anthropology Human geography Sociology Civil engineering, surveying and building The arts: general topics Design, Industrial and commercial arts, illustration Architecture |