Abstract
To feel at home is an experience often proffered as desirable because it connotes comfort and familiarity, and as such it is often taken for granted as positive. In this essay, I delineate how “home,” whether actual or metaphorical, is a contested concept and location, one that is marked not only by who and what we let in but by what we keep out. I offer that belonging—multiple, elective, and temporary—enables a way more in keeping with our transient being.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
Barnhart R. K.
(Ed.). (2000 ). Home. In Chambers dictionary of etymology (p. 487 ). Edinburgh, England : Chambers Harrap .
2.
Bogart A.
(2001 ). A director prepares: Seven essays on art and theatre. London, England : Routledge.
3.
Braidotti, R. (n.d.). Braidotti: Nomadic feminist theory in a global era [Video file]. Retrieved from http://vimeo.com/51895848
4.
Conquergood D.
(1995 ). Of caravans and carnivals: Performance studies in motion. The Drama Review , 39 , 137 –141 . doi:10.2307/1146488
5.
Denzin N. K.
(2014 ). Welcome from the director. In Tenth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry program , 4 –5 .
6.
Duyvendak J. W.
(2011 ). The politics of home: Belonging and nostalgia in Western Europe and the United States. New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan.
7.
Easthope H.
(2004 ). A place called home. Housing Theory and Society , 21 , 128 –138 . doi:10.1080/14036090410021360
8.
George R. M.
(1996 ). The politics of home: Postcolonial relocations and twentieth-century fiction. Berkeley : University of California Press.
9.
Heidegger M.
(1996 ). Being and time (J. Stambaugh, Trans.). Albany : State University of New York Press .
10.
Hooks B.
(1990 ). Yearning: Race, gender and cultural politics. Boston, MA : South End Press.
11.
Morrissey T. E.
(2014 , May 23). Women are more stressed at home than at work. Jezebel. Retrieved from http://jezebel.com/women-are-more-stressed-at-home-than-at-work-1580619626
12.
Rapport N.
, &
Dawson A.
(Eds.). (1998 ). Migrants of identity: Perceptions of “home” in a world of movement. London, England : Bloomsbury Academic.
