In my account home is a virtual place, a repository for memories of the lived spaces. It locates lived time and space, particularly intimate familial time and space.
Mallett, S. (2004). Understanding home: a critical review of the literature. The Sociological Review, 52(1), 63.
Rather they assert that people’s personal and familial experiences as
well as significant social change, influence their perceived needs and desires
in relation to house design. Changing patterns of employment, particularly
of wealth, transformations in peoples’ ideas about community, family, even
the good life, all impact on the notion of the ideal home.
Mallett, S. (2004). Understanding home: a critical review of the literature. The Sociological Review, 52(1), 67-68.
"The word refuge not only implies security from the outrages of the outside world but also suggests that this security provides both space and time for the awakening and assertion of identity, which itself is a form of stimulation."
Porteous, J. D. (1976). Home: The territorial core. Geographical Review, 66(4), 386.
The definition of home is ambiguous, unique to each individual.
Home can be singular and/or plural, alienable and/or inalienable, fixed and stable and/or mobile and changing. It can be associated with feelings of comfort, ease intimacy, relaxation and security and/or oppression, tyranny and persecution. It can or can not be associated with family.
Mallett, S. (2004). Understanding home: a critical review of the literature. The Sociological Review, 52(1), 84.
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