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'Snowed in!': Offbeat Rhythms and Belonging as Everyday Practice
by
Bennett, Julia
in
Autobiographical literature
/ Ethics
/ Everyday life
/ Families & family life
/ Neighborhoods
/ Ontology
/ Sociology
/ Studies
/ Weather
2015
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Do you wish to request the book?
'Snowed in!': Offbeat Rhythms and Belonging as Everyday Practice
by
Bennett, Julia
in
Autobiographical literature
/ Ethics
/ Everyday life
/ Families & family life
/ Neighborhoods
/ Ontology
/ Sociology
/ Studies
/ Weather
2015
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'Snowed in!': Offbeat Rhythms and Belonging as Everyday Practice
Journal Article
'Snowed in!': Offbeat Rhythms and Belonging as Everyday Practice
2015
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Overview
Belonging is usually seen as a taken-for-granted, and perhaps ill-defined, aspect of everyday life. Through looking at the weather, family life and the local neighbourhood, this article argues that belonging should be recognised as an active and rhythmic practice, creating and recreating relationships, or an 'ethic of care', between people, place and history. Using elements of Lefebvre's rhythmanalysis, the article employs a diary written during a week of inclement weather to illustrate how belonging is done through the rhythms and activities of everyday life, such as being a neighbour. This demonstrates how belonging as a way of being-in-the-world, an 'ontological belonging', is practical, material and tangible. Repositioning the 'sense' of belonging as an everyday activity with tangible consequences brings with it associated responsibilities (an 'ethic of care') for place and the people who live there.
Publisher
SAGE Publications,Cambridge University Press
Subject
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