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The Vernacular Landscape of Assisted Living
Authors:Roth Erin G  Eckert J Kevin
Affiliation:Center for Aging Studies, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 1000 Hilltop Circle, Public Policy 252, Baltimore, Maryland 21250, United States.
Abstract:This article is an exploration into the vernacular landscape of Assisted Living (AL), a conceptual idea borrowed from cultural geographer J.B. Jackson, which distinguishes formalized, planned space from those spaces which are unintended and often created spontaneously--vernacular. Based upon three large-scale, multi-year ethnographic studies in Maryland, we consider some of the ways people who live in AL relate to and respond to the built environment, at times subverting the intended purpose of design to make it their own. The conflict that often ensues over both planned and vernacular public and private space, we propose is ultimately the product of living within an environment that is both someone's home as well as a place of business, whose job it is to keep people safe. Within this physical context of vernacular private and public spaces, this article enriches understandings about the way autonomy and privacy expresses itself.
Keywords:Assisted living   Built environment   Autonomy   Privacy   Ethnography   Public   Sociability   Place   Vernacular   Agency   Communitas
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