Home Territories: Media, Mobility and Identity

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Psychology Press, 2000 - History - 340 pages

Home Territories examines how traditional ideas of home, homeland and nation have been destabilised both by new patterns of migration and by new communication technologies which routinely transgress the symbolic boundaries around both the private household and the nation state. David Morley analyses the varieties of exile, diaspora, displacement, connectedness, mobility experienced by members of social groups, and relates the micro structures of the home, the family and the domestic realm, to contemporary debates about the nation, community and cultural identities. He explores issues such as the role of gender in the construction of domesticity, and the conflation of ideas of maternity and home, and engages with recent debates about the 'territorialisation of culture'.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Ideas of home
16
2 Heimat modernity and exile
31
3 The gender of home
56
4 At home with the media
86
5 Broadcasting and the construction of the National Family
105
urban and virtual geographies of exclusion
128
7 Media mobility and migrancy
149
8 Postmodern virtual and cybernetic geographies
171
strangers and foreigners
204
boundary hybridity and identity
225
at home in Europe?
246
Notes
266
Index
331
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