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Dirty Linen, Liminal Spaces, and Later Life: Meanings of Laundry in Care Home Design and Practice

Author

Listed:
  • Christina Buse

    (University of York, UK)

  • Julia Twigg

    (University of Kent, UK)

  • Sarah Nettleton

    (University of York, UK)

  • Daryl Martin

    (University of York, UK)

Abstract

This article explores the design and practice of laundries and laundry work in care home settings. This is an often-overlooked aspect of the care environment, yet one that shapes lived experiences and meanings of care. It draws on ethnographic and qualitative data from two UK-based Economic and Social Research Council–funded studies: Buildings in the Making , a study of architects designing care homes for later life, and Dementia and Dress , a project exploring the role of clothing in dementia care. Drawing together these studies, the article explores the temporality and spatiality of laundry work, contrasting designers’ conceptions of laundry in terms of flows, movement, and efficiency with the lived bodily reality of laundry work, governed by the messiness of care and ‘body time’. The article examines how laundry is embedded within the meanings and imaginaries of the care home as a ‘home’ or ‘hotel’, and exposes the limitations of these imaginaries. We explore the significance of laundry work for supporting identity, as part of wider assemblages of care. The article concludes by drawing out implications for architectural design and sociological conceptions of care.

Suggested Citation

  • Christina Buse & Julia Twigg & Sarah Nettleton & Daryl Martin, 2018. "Dirty Linen, Liminal Spaces, and Later Life: Meanings of Laundry in Care Home Design and Practice," Sociological Research Online, , vol. 23(4), pages 711-727, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:socres:v:23:y:2018:i:4:p:711-727
    DOI: 10.1177/1360780418780037
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