Fr. 236.00

Shared Housing, Shared Lives - Everyday Experiences Across the Lifecourse

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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List of contents

1. Introduction: Shared housing in context
2. The challenges of shared living
3. Motivations for shared living
4. The economic and material organisation of shared housing
5. The spatial organisation of shared living
6. Time matters in shared living
7. Conclusion
Appendix 1: Pen portraits of research participants
Bibliography
Index

About the author

Sue Heath is Professor of Sociology and Co-Director of the Morgan Centre for Research into Everyday Lives, University of Manchester, UK
Katherine Davies is Lecturer in Sociology at The University of Sheffield, UK
Gemma Edwards is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Manchester, UK
Rachael M Scicluna is a Lecturer in the School of Anthropology and Conservation at the University of Kent, UK

Summary

Focusing on sharers in a wide variety of contexts and at all stages of the life course, this book demonstrates how issues such as finances, domestic space and daily routines are all factors which can impact upon personal relationships and wider understandings of the home and privacy.

Additional text

Shared Housing, Shared Lives provides important theoretical and ethnographic accounts of shared living arrangements, ranging from the familiar spare-room lodger, and multi-person house-share, to strong ideological commitment to values of collective living. In a climate of austerity, many more people in the UK find themselves sharing their homes and habits with housemates, and the authors of this book invite you to step inside the material spaces and social, sensory proximities of day-to-day sharing. At last, an incisive and nuanced analysis of shared housing.
Dr Helen Jarvis, Reader in Social Geography, Newcastle University, UK
While standard nuclear family households loom large in imaginings of contemporary domestic relations, not least among planners and policy makers, in recent years, sharing a home with strangers has become a more common experience. Across developed societies, supportive links between life-course transitions and ascent up a housing ladder have become increasingly fragile and movement, markedly non-linear, with this pattern exacerbated by recent economic crises. This book represents the most advanced and thorough analysis of the current conditions of sharing households. It builds on a deep contextual knowledge of the rise and conditions of contemporary sharers as well as important empirical insights from English cases.
Professor Richard Ronald, Professor of Housing, Society and Space, Centre for Urban Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
This book is a key text for students and researchers alike who are interested in changes to access, consumption, forms and experiences of home.
Tegan Bergan, Western Sydney University

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