1st Edition
Making Homes Ethnography and Design
176 Pages
by
Routledge
176 Pages
by
Routledge
176 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
Making Homes: Anthropology and Design is a strong addition to the emerging field of design anthropology. Based on the latest scholarship and practice in the social sciences as well as design, this interdisciplinary text introduces a new design ethnography which offers unique and original approaches to research and intervention in the home.Presenting a coherent theoretical and methodological... Read more
List of FiguresList of AuthorsAcknowledgmentsSeries Preface: Why Home?Rosie Cox, Birkbeck, University of London, UK, and Victor Buchli, University College London, UK1. Design, Ethnography and Homes2. Temporalities3. Environments4. Activity and Movement5. Methods for Researching Homes6. Homes in TranslationIndex
Biography
Sarah Pink is Professor of Design and Media Ethnography at RMIT University, Australia, Professor of Social Sciences at Loughborough University, UK, and Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis at Halmstad University SwedenKerstin Leder Mackley is a Research Associate at Loughborough Design School, UKRoxana Morosanu is a PhD candidate at Loughborough University, UKVal Mitchell is a Senior Lecturer at Loughborough University, UKTracy Bhamra is Professor of Sustainable Design and Dean of the Design School at Loughborough University, UK
"The home is a familiar space, a place we inhabit in one form or another. Making Homes presents ways not just for observation of that space, but for projection too. Pink et al. brilliantly succeed in both illustrating the manifold complexities of home—""making the familiar strange""—and in portraying the home as a space for future-making. Making Homes is relevant for a wide array of people, social scientists, architects and basically anyone who wants to know more about how we inhabit space. - Gareth Doherty, Harvard University Graduate School of Design, USA A landmark contribution to our understanding of home cultures and the emergent field of design ethnography. The authors rightly understand the home as a site of both habitual everyday life and change. Making Homes is essential reading for designers and researchers concerned with how we create better futures. - Philip Crang, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK"






