Vacation Homes, Enchanted Family Memories and Inequalities

Michelle Janning, PhD

Vacation Homes, Enchanted Family Memories and Inequalities

Sociologist Michelle Janning, PhD, will present research findings from her new book, Investing in Enchantment: Memory, Market, and the Family Vacation Home. She will discuss how family vacation homes are a compelling site to examine social roles, relationships and — most important — social inequalities. She'll delve into how homeowners frame the image of “ideal” neighbors as a moral exercise that reinforces second homeownership as a privilege. Janning will also discuss how structural inequalities along race and class lines are hidden in strategic reframing of property as “magical.”

Janning, a professor of sociology and the Raymond and Elsie Gipson DeBurgh Endowed Chair of Social Sciences at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington, is also the co-director of Whitman’s new Human-Centered Design program. Her research focuses on the intersections between material and spatial culture and social roles, relationships, and inequalities — with particular emphasis on stories found in families, neighborhoods and schools.

The event is free and open to the public; no reservations or tickets are required. For more information, contact Akiko Yasuike at ayasuike@CalLutheran.edu.

Sponsored By
Sociology Department

Contact

Akiko Yasuike
ayasuike@CalLutheran.edu

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