ABSTRACT

Housing and Home Unbound pioneers understandings of housing and home as a meeting ground in which intensive practices, materials and meanings tangle with extensive economic, environmental and political worlds. Cutting across disciplines, the book opens up the conceptual and empirical study of housing and home by exploring the coproduction of the concrete and the abstract, the intimate and the institutional, the experiential and the collective.

Exploring diverse examples in Australia and New Zealand, contributors address the interleaving of money and materials in the digital commodity of real estate, the neoliberal invention of housing as a liquid asset and source of welfare provision, and the bundling of car and home in housing markets. The more-than-human relations of housing and home are articulated through the role of suburban nature in the making of Australian modernity, the marketing of nature in waterfront urban renewal, the role of domestic territory in subversive social movements such as Seasteading and Tiny Houses, and the search for home comfort through low-cost energy efficiency practices. The transformative politics of housing and home are explored through the decolonizing of housing tenure, the shaping of housing policy by urban social movements, the lived importance of marginal spaces in Indigenous and other housing, and the affective lessons of the ruin. Beginning with the diverse elements gathered together in housing and home, the text opens up the complex realities and possibilities of human dwelling.

part |76 pages

Housing/home and worlds of finance

chapter |16 pages

Uploading real estate

Home as a digital, global commodity

chapter |17 pages

Homeownership, asset-based welfare and the actuarial subject

Exploring the dynamics of ageing and homeownership in New Zealand

chapter |16 pages

Building on sand?

Liquid housing wealth in an era of financialisation

chapter |21 pages

Cohabiting with cars

The tangled connections between car parking and housing markets

part |74 pages

Housing/home and worlds of nature

chapter |17 pages

Secure in the privacy of your own nature

Political ontology, urban nature and home ownership in Australia

chapter |17 pages

Displacement as method

Seasteading, tiny houses and ‘Freemen on the Land'

chapter |16 pages

‘The best house possible'

The everyday practices and micro-politics of achieving comfort in a low-cost home

part |69 pages

Housing/home and worlds of possibility

chapter |14 pages

Performing housing affordability

The case of Sydney's green bans

chapter |14 pages

Interstitial housing space

No centre just borders

chapter |14 pages

Burnt houses and the haunted home

Reconfiguring the ruin in Australia