Book detail: Home: A Short History of an Idea is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
This work traces the intellectual and social development of what people consider home, moving through historical periods to show how domestic ideals have changed. The book addresses how notions of privacy, comfort, and domesticity emerged and transformed, particularly in Western contexts from the medieval period through modern times. It examines architectural spaces, interior arrangements, and social attitudes to reveal how the home became associated with psychological refuge, emotional intimacy, and personal identity. The author analyzes how class distinctions, gender roles, and technological changes shaped domestic environments and expectations. Rather than focusing on a single nation or style, the study considers broader patterns in how societies have conceptualized the relationship between dwelling, family life, and individual well-being. The work draws connections between physical spaces and the abstract ideals they were meant to embody, showing how the home became a central institution in modern life.
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