On the Modalities of the Domestic

Authors: Das, Veena; Ellen, Jonathan M.; Leonard, Lori

Source: Home Cultures, Volume 5, Number 3, November 2008 , pp. 349-371(23)

Publisher: Berg Publishers

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Abstract:

This article focuses on experiences of the domestic—of houses, of intimacy and privacy—and what relation these bear to the kinds of sentiments about life which are given expression as fragile, endangered or fleeting. We think of singularity as lying in the potential for multiple domesticities that emerge at different times and are neither coterminous with family nor indeed with household. Based on fieldwork with African-American and Caribbean families in Miami, Florida and Baltimore, MD, the article tracks how intimacy and alienation marks the constant moves from, to, and through households. This oscillation engenders an itinerant domesticity and life lived in the interstices of the house, the clinic, the prison, and the street. These spaces and places come to bear on what comes to be marked as so-called "African-American kinship." Given the disproportionate incarceration of African-American men in US prisons, the article contemplates the permeable relation between carceral institutions and the home, as well as the constitution of kinship as "criminal."

All names used in this text are pseudonyms to protect the confidentiality of respondents.

Keywords: DOMESTICITY; PRISON; INTIMACY; KINSHIP; CRIMINALITY

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2752/174063108X368355

Publication date: 2008-11-01

More about this publication?
  • Home Cultures is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the critical understanding of the domestic sphere, its artifacts, spaces and relations, across timeframes and cultures. 'Home' is a highly fluid and contested site of human existence that reflects and reifies identities and values.

    In this context Home Cultures explores the relationship between body and building, consumption, material culture, the meaning of home, moving cultures and social consequences of planning and architecture.
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