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Space and Culture
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Moving Homes

From House to Nursing Home and the (Un-)Canniness of Being at Home

Michael Schillmeier

Munich University

Michael Heinlein

Munich University

This article argues that home relates not so much to a fixed and clearly bounded spatial "being" but can be understood as a "becoming," that is, a set of spatial and temporal practices and experiences that fabricate the (un-)canniness of what it means to be at home or not. The (un-)canniness of being at home refers to the mediating and altering relations of changing bodies, emotions, and things that enact the specificities that make up the very feelings and practices of being at home. By retracing the story of a male suffering from two strokes, the authors follow the process of moving from his private house to a nursing home. The ethnographic work presented here tries to highlight the very fragile contingency and normativity of such dynamics concerning the (un-)canniness of being at home.

Key Words: being at home • movement • (un-)canniness • constant care • assistive technologies

This version was published on May 1, 2009

Space and Culture, Vol. 12, No. 2, 218-231 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1206331208330759


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