Publication | Closed Access
Dwelling the Telecare Home
20
Citations
33
References
2009
Year
TelepsychiatryIndependent LivingSocial GeographySocial SciencesBuilt EnvironmentTelecarePlace ParadigmTelehealthTerm HabitalityHousingSocial EnvironmentTelepresenceTelecare HomeCommunity EnvironmentSociologyTelematicsEthnographyAnthropologyEveryday UrbanismMedicineSocial AnthropologyHomelessness
Home has become a newly fostered place for care giving in what might be called an aging in place paradigm. As a result, thinking about how the home's spatialities are configured and how they might transform caring has become an important issue for the social sciences. This article is a contribution to this line of thought and looks at being-at-home from a non-anthropocentric point of view. By focusing on the telecare cases of an ongoing ethnographic project and drawing on Heideggerian insights on dwelling and place, we coin the term habitality . We think this term is useful for two purposes: (1) to think about the home as a materially heterogeneous set of spatialities and subjectivities and (2) to understand being-at-home not as a way of living in an enclosed and protected shelter of routine activities, but as a way of combining those spatialities and subjectivities and the differences (and oddities) they might bring.
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