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Life At Home In The Twenty-First Century: 32 Families Open Their Doors (2012)

by Jeanne E. Arnold(Favorite Author)
3.94 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
1931745617 (ISBN13: 0884181112833)
languge
English
genre
publisher
UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press
review 1: I have been babbling about this book to everyone I've seen since I read it. It's an archaeological look at early twenty-first century American home life, a sort of material culture of the recent past (and it is definitely past--for all that the study is barely a decade old, some of what it describes is barely recognizable today. The rise of the smartphone, in particular, I suspect has made some enduring shifts on home life.) The photos are fascinating; my only complaint is that the text is often all too short. I wanted less coffee table, more academia. But what I got was still worthwhile.Some particular observations that have lingered in my mind:The benefit of microwaved meals isn't that they save cooking time, it's that they save thinking time (namely, menu-planning).Peop... morele say they use their yards; they lie. (Even in Southern California, where you'd expect the year-round pleasant weather would make it a more attractive option.)The single most beneficial remodel to your home in terms of quality-of-life is (if you have only one) adding a second bathroom.How much stuff a family has on their fridge directly correlates with how much stuff they have in their house.Families spend by far most of their time in their kitchens. (I am, grudgingly, starting to understand why people like open floorplan homes. I still hate them, though. MY KITCHEN, MY PRIVATE SPACE, GET OUT. Uh, this may be why I live alone.)
review 2: They are collectors, wasters, consumers and hoarders, and they are us. Here are the findings, in text and photo, of a team of scientists who spent several years applying intensive methods of anthropological study to 32 middle-class American families. They confirm all our worst fears (and then some) about our conspicuous consumption. And of course there's bonus trivia here, such as: there is an almost perfect correspondence between—imagine this!—a cluttered refrigerator door and a cluttered home. less
Reviews (see all)
kayba71
Thoroughly eye-opening. I will be reading and re-reading this many times over the years.
besh
Pretty fascinating. The writing could have been jazzed up.
awaywiththeclouds
This is an absolutely fascinating book.
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