Storeys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In London

Based on 12 months of ethnographic research in a luxury square and a council estate in Chelsea, London, this thesis questions widespread conceptualisations of empty homes as sites of decay and decline associated with a loss of community. I combine current debates about the transformation of homes in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mukherji, M
Other Authors: Dzenovska, D
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
_version_ 1826308091797307392
author Mukherji, M
author2 Dzenovska, D
author_facet Dzenovska, D
Mukherji, M
author_sort Mukherji, M
collection OXFORD
description Based on 12 months of ethnographic research in a luxury square and a council estate in Chelsea, London, this thesis questions widespread conceptualisations of empty homes as sites of decay and decline associated with a loss of community. I combine current debates about the transformation of homes into financial assets with the latest material culture approaches to land, belonging and the home, to offer unique insights into everyday experiences of living alongside empty homes. Through rituals and practices such as gardening, visiting the nearby cemetery, drawing family trees and carol singing, the participants in my research created strong feelings of belonging and identity amidst flows of capital and the financialisation of housing. By focusing on specific creative practices that residents engage in to battle or conceal emptiness across the two sites, the thesis extends beyond the policy-oriented approach of “solving” the problem of emptiness, while allowing for a critical interrogation of which homes fall within this problematisation in the first place. I argue that the perceived emptiness is less about absence and more about neglect towards particular forms of care. By paying close attention to practices of care and the trope of the community that is evoked across both my sites, my research transcends any simplistic binary narrative of emptiness as absence or crisis and reveals instead how the concept is linked with deeply ingrained patterns of ownership, cycles of renewal and long-lasting relationships to land.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:12:50Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:c21e11a8-f355-4829-a19d-272e62b0d99f
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:12:50Z
publishDate 2020
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:c21e11a8-f355-4829-a19d-272e62b0d99f2022-07-12T16:54:49ZStoreys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In LondonThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:c21e11a8-f355-4829-a19d-272e62b0d99fAnthropologyHousingUrban renewalFictionEnglishHyrax Deposit2020Mukherji, MDzenovska, DDaniels, IBased on 12 months of ethnographic research in a luxury square and a council estate in Chelsea, London, this thesis questions widespread conceptualisations of empty homes as sites of decay and decline associated with a loss of community. I combine current debates about the transformation of homes into financial assets with the latest material culture approaches to land, belonging and the home, to offer unique insights into everyday experiences of living alongside empty homes. Through rituals and practices such as gardening, visiting the nearby cemetery, drawing family trees and carol singing, the participants in my research created strong feelings of belonging and identity amidst flows of capital and the financialisation of housing. By focusing on specific creative practices that residents engage in to battle or conceal emptiness across the two sites, the thesis extends beyond the policy-oriented approach of “solving” the problem of emptiness, while allowing for a critical interrogation of which homes fall within this problematisation in the first place. I argue that the perceived emptiness is less about absence and more about neglect towards particular forms of care. By paying close attention to practices of care and the trope of the community that is evoked across both my sites, my research transcends any simplistic binary narrative of emptiness as absence or crisis and reveals instead how the concept is linked with deeply ingrained patterns of ownership, cycles of renewal and long-lasting relationships to land.
spellingShingle Anthropology
Housing
Urban renewal
Fiction
Mukherji, M
Storeys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In London
title Storeys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In London
title_full Storeys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In London
title_fullStr Storeys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In London
title_full_unstemmed Storeys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In London
title_short Storeys of emptiness: an ethnography of empty homes In London
title_sort storeys of emptiness an ethnography of empty homes in london
topic Anthropology
Housing
Urban renewal
Fiction
work_keys_str_mv AT mukherjim storeysofemptinessanethnographyofemptyhomesinlondon