Abstract


 
 
 Discourses on the home as a physicality often recount on romantic or nostalgic notions such as safety, comfort, and identity. Home as a defined boundary from the public realm and as a private space can be conceptualised as a gendered landscape, in which women are confined to roles involving reproductive and domestic labor. Thus, in a paradoxical sense, although home is socially constructed to fit ideals and create a space of material safety, it can also create a geography of difference in terms of women and the systemic barriers that can lead to violence against women, such as domestic or familial violence. This paper discusses the geography of the home and its physical and social attributes as it intersects with gender inequalities. Moreover, an intersectional and focused analysis on how domestic violence can occur because of gendered perceptions in the home is provided. This introductory research paper examines existing literature and can add to the limited research in domestic violence against women. Thus, the paper may be used to inform future housing policy such that a more comprehensive approach which includes domestic violence perspectives are considered.
 
 

Highlights

  • Discourses on the home as a physicality often recount on romantic or nostalgic notions as a structure that houses both material and symbolic items such as safety, comfort, and identity (Mallett, 2004)

  • The home can be conceptualised as a gendered landscape, in which women are confined to roles involving reproductive and domestic labor

  • While home is socially constructed to fit ideals and create a space of material safety, it can create a geography of difference regarding women and the systemic barriers that can lead to violence against women

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Discourses on the home as a physicality often recount on romantic or nostalgic notions as a structure that houses both material and symbolic items such as safety, comfort, and identity (Mallett, 2004). While home is socially constructed to fit ideals and create a space of material safety, it can create a geography of difference regarding women and the systemic barriers that can lead to violence against women. As Wardhaugh (1999) explains, in homes where women are victimised, women begin to adopt an identity as individuals who are ‘homeless at home’, reifying the phenomena of homelessness and domestic violence as gendered and ripe with inequalities. This linkage between gender inequalities and the home conceptualises an unjust boundary in which negative stigmas around women continue to permeate throughout society. A focused analysis on how the victimisation of women and domestic violence can occur as a result of the gendered perceptions of the home will be discussed

Home as a Geography of Difference
Gendered Labor Divisions Within the Home
Victimisation of Women Within the Home
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call