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Becoming at home in residential care for older people: a material culture perspective

Residential homes encourage new residents to bring belongings with them, so that they can personalise their room and ‘feel at home’. Existing literature on material culture in residential homes views objects as symbols and repositories of home and identity, which can facilitate a sense of belonging...

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Published in:Sociology of health & illness 2018-02, Vol.40 (2), p.366-378
Main Author: Lovatt, Melanie
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Language:English
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description Residential homes encourage new residents to bring belongings with them, so that they can personalise their room and ‘feel at home’. Existing literature on material culture in residential homes views objects as symbols and repositories of home and identity, which can facilitate a sense of belonging in residents through their display in residents' rooms. I suggest that this both misunderstands the processual and fluid nature of home and identity, and conceptualises objects as essentially passive. This article uses ethnographic data and theories of practice and relationality to argue that rather than the meaning of home being inherent in objects, or felt subjectively by residents, meaning is generated through ongoing, everyday interactions between the two. I show that residents became at home by acquiring new things –as well as displaying existing possessions – and also through interacting with mundane objects in everyday social and relational practices such as cleaning and hosting. I conclude that being at home in older people's residential homes need not be so different from being at home at other stages of the life course and in other settings. This challenges conceptualisations of older people's homes – and older age itself – as somehow unknowable and unfamiliar.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/1467-9566.12568
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); EZB Free E-Journals; Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Aged, 80 and over
ageing
Aging - psychology
Belonging
Cleaning
Female
Humans
Identity
Interior Design and Furnishings
Life course
Male
Material culture
Meaning
Older people
qualitative methods generally
Qualitative Research
Quality of Life
Residential care
Residential Facilities
Residential institutions
residential/nursing home care
Social Theory
title Becoming at home in residential care for older people: a material culture perspective
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