(Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity

This thesis addresses the oft-neglected experiences of ‘homeless’ women. It explores how homelessness impacts on women’s identities and how this is negotiated and/or resisted. An integrated theoretical framework links homelessness and identity literature with feminist insights surrounding marginalis...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mccarthy, Lindsey
Other Authors: Reeve, Kesia ; Casey, Rionach
Published: Sheffield Hallam University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.668774
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-668774
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6687742018-09-05T03:31:40Z(Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identityMccarthy, LindseyReeve, Kesia ; Casey, Rionach2015This thesis addresses the oft-neglected experiences of ‘homeless’ women. It explores how homelessness impacts on women’s identities and how this is negotiated and/or resisted. An integrated theoretical framework links homelessness and identity literature with feminist insights surrounding marginalised women. By centring the experiences and identity-work of homeless women, this thesis contributes to bodies of work on homelessness, women and identity from a feminist perspective. The study advances knowledge of home and homelessness and the relationship between these supposedly binary concepts; and contributes to existing understandings of identity, in relation to marginalised women. Findings are based on a combination of in-depth qualitative interviews, participant-produced photographs, and follow-up photo-elicitation interviews with twelve women accessing homelessness support services – hostels, supported housing projects, day-centres, and women’s centres –in a range of homelessness situations. This research produced four significant findings. First, home and homelessness were experienced in broader senses than previously found. As home existed in a variety of states, women experienced homelessness in a myriad of ways: homelessness was thus expanded beyond the point of entry into homelessness services. Second, homelessness was felt as a comparative lack. Rather than feeling stigmatised because of their homelessness in and of itself, homelessness affected the women in that they saw housing as a measuring stick and came out lacking. Third, homelessness presented an opportunity for re-creation of self because of the challenges it raised. While previous literature states that the current homeless self is profaned, this study found women to praise the current self as reformed and wiser despite constraining social factors. Finally, this thesis emphasises the malleability of identity categories and argues that marginalisation is not an outright barrier to reflexivity and creativity. Homeless women performed other identities beyond their homelessness, and housing/home experiences are not fixed determinants of identity and self.362.5Sheffield Hallam Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.668774http://shura.shu.ac.uk/11000/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 362.5
spellingShingle 362.5
Mccarthy, Lindsey
(Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity
description This thesis addresses the oft-neglected experiences of ‘homeless’ women. It explores how homelessness impacts on women’s identities and how this is negotiated and/or resisted. An integrated theoretical framework links homelessness and identity literature with feminist insights surrounding marginalised women. By centring the experiences and identity-work of homeless women, this thesis contributes to bodies of work on homelessness, women and identity from a feminist perspective. The study advances knowledge of home and homelessness and the relationship between these supposedly binary concepts; and contributes to existing understandings of identity, in relation to marginalised women. Findings are based on a combination of in-depth qualitative interviews, participant-produced photographs, and follow-up photo-elicitation interviews with twelve women accessing homelessness support services – hostels, supported housing projects, day-centres, and women’s centres –in a range of homelessness situations. This research produced four significant findings. First, home and homelessness were experienced in broader senses than previously found. As home existed in a variety of states, women experienced homelessness in a myriad of ways: homelessness was thus expanded beyond the point of entry into homelessness services. Second, homelessness was felt as a comparative lack. Rather than feeling stigmatised because of their homelessness in and of itself, homelessness affected the women in that they saw housing as a measuring stick and came out lacking. Third, homelessness presented an opportunity for re-creation of self because of the challenges it raised. While previous literature states that the current homeless self is profaned, this study found women to praise the current self as reformed and wiser despite constraining social factors. Finally, this thesis emphasises the malleability of identity categories and argues that marginalisation is not an outright barrier to reflexivity and creativity. Homeless women performed other identities beyond their homelessness, and housing/home experiences are not fixed determinants of identity and self.
author2 Reeve, Kesia ; Casey, Rionach
author_facet Reeve, Kesia ; Casey, Rionach
Mccarthy, Lindsey
author Mccarthy, Lindsey
author_sort Mccarthy, Lindsey
title (Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity
title_short (Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity
title_full (Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity
title_fullStr (Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity
title_full_unstemmed (Re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity
title_sort (re)negotiating the self : homeless women's constructions of home, homelessness and identity
publisher Sheffield Hallam University
publishDate 2015
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.668774
work_keys_str_mv AT mccarthylindsey renegotiatingtheselfhomelesswomensconstructionsofhomehomelessnessandidentity
_version_ 1718730504622047232