Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Liz Hingley received the 2011 Getty Editorial Grant to complete her project The Jones Family, which explores the intergenerational cycle of deprivation within the context of a wealthy country. In this visual essay, she observes the significance of one particular item of material culture—the bed—in the everyday life of a low-income British family. Photographs are taken as points of departure to demonstrate how a close examination of the bed can reveal the patterns of a household's past, present and future lives, economic situation, desires, and ideals. The bed is discussed in relation to socioeconomic status, home arrangement, taste and consumption, family relations, and identity.
Liz Hingley received the 2011 Getty Editorial Grant to complete her project The Jones Family, which explores the intergenerational cycle of deprivation within the context of a wealthy country. In this visual essay, she observes the significance of one particular item of material culture—the bed—in the everyday life of a low-income British family. Photographs are taken as points of departure to demonstrate how a close examination of the bed can reveal the patterns of a household's past, present and future lives, economic situation, desires, and ideals. The bed is discussed in relation to socioeconomic status, home arrangement, taste and consumption, family relations, and identity.
Unmade Beds
Hingley, Liz (Autor:in)
Home Cultures ; 10 ; 63-74
01.03.2013
12 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
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