Imagined bodies: architects and their constructions of later life

This article comprises a sociological analysis of how architects imagine the ageing body when designing residential care homes for later life and the extent to which they engage empathetically with users. Drawing on interviews with architectural professionals based in the United Kingdom, we offer in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ageing and society 2017-08, Vol.37 (7), p.1435-1457
Hauptverfasser: BUSE, CHRISTINA, NETTLETON, SARAH, MARTIN, DARYL, TWIGG, JULIA
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container_end_page 1457
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1435
container_title Ageing and society
container_volume 37
creator BUSE, CHRISTINA
NETTLETON, SARAH
MARTIN, DARYL
TWIGG, JULIA
description This article comprises a sociological analysis of how architects imagine the ageing body when designing residential care homes for later life and the extent to which they engage empathetically with users. Drawing on interviews with architectural professionals based in the United Kingdom, we offer insight into the ways in which architects envisage the bodies of those who they anticipate will populate their buildings. Deploying the notions of ‘body work’ and ‘the body multiple’, our analysis reveals how architects imagined a variety of bodies in nuanced ways. These imagined bodies emerge as they talked through the practicalities of the design process. Moreover, their conceptions of bodies were also permeated by prevailing ideologies of caring: although we found that they sought to resist dominant discourses of ageing, they nevertheless reproduced these discourses. Architects’ constructions of bodies are complicated by the collaborative nature of the design process, where we find an incessant juggling between the competing demands of multiple stakeholders, each of whom anticipate other imagined bodies and seek to shape the design of buildings to meet their requirements. Our findings extend a nascent sociological literature on architecture and social care by revealing how architects participate in the shaping of care for later life as ‘body workers’, but also how their empathic aspirations can be muted by other imperatives driving the marketisation of care.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects 20th century
Age
Aging
Architects
Architecture
Baby boomers
Buildings
Chronic illnesses
Collaboration
Consumption
Design
Discourses
Hospitals
Human body
Hygiene
Ideology
Interest groups
Medicine
Nursing homes
Older people
Residential care
Residential institutions
Social services
Sociology
title Imagined bodies: architects and their constructions of later life
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