Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

A Look At How Real Home Life Has Changed Over The Years, While The Ideal Of 'Home' Hasn't

The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2015 12:23 PM
    Home sweet home. It seems so simple.
     
    But while the idea of "home" remains constant — the epitome of the familiar and reliable — actual home life is messier and changes all the time. So says Judith Flanders, author of "The Making of Home: The 500-Year Story of How Our Houses Became Our Homes" (Thomas Dunne Books, September 2015), in which she traces the evolution of the home, and concepts of home, in northern Europe and America from the 16th century to the early 20th century.
     
    She looks at changes in technology, such as plumbing and toilets, tableware and furniture, windows and window dressings, light bulbs and kitchen gadgets, as well as changes in culture, such as marriage patterns, hopes and customs.
     
    "There's a huge disconnect between the mental construct of home and the reality, and it turns out that that's been the case for centuries," says Flanders, reached by phone recently in her London home.
     
    For instance, while some might think that families and marriages used to be more stable, "broken homes were the absolute norm in most of history," she says. "A home can't be any more broken than if one parent is dead."
     
    As for appearance, "the paintings of the Dutch golden age did not depict what Dutch households of the time actually looked like," Flanders says. While the paintings are heavy with symbolism and appear sparse and sparkling, actual homes were crowded with furniture.
     
    She likens the disconnect to the images featured in today's interior-design magazines, which are generally devoid of toothbrushes, electrical outlets, hampers, dish racks and other basic amenities, as well as the tchotchkes that clutter many real homes.
     
    "It really proves that our desire to believe in this ideal of home overrides everything. We don't like to be told or reminded that it's not true," she says.
     
    Something as basic today as the fork, she says, did not appear as a standard eating implement in most places until well into the 18th century. "You had a cutting and a piercing instrument in your knife. You had a scooping implement in your spoon. You were set," Flanders says.
     
    But then pasta came along as a standard starch in Italy, and the earthenware plate replaced wooden trenchers. Tableware needs rapidly changed.
     
    "Suddenly a twiddling instrument becomes more frequently seen on tables. Except for the British Navy, which remarkably held out on adopting the fork until 1897," Flanders says.
     
    Similarly, she traces the impact on home life of glass windows, electric lighting and indoor plumbing.
     
    "The only real stability we have in the home, if one looks at the centuries of history, is the belief that home is a stable thing. Everything changes all the time," she says.
     
    The shift to computers and then to individual handheld devices is similarly changing social norms at home, she notes; it's much more rare now to see everyone sitting together around a radio or TV.
     
    "The reason the idea of 'home' survives is because it's so fluid that it can encompass rapidly changing social customs," says Flanders. "It's a nice warm quilt to wrap ourselves in to keep out the cold that's outside."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Homicide Detectives Investigating After Soldier, Woman Fall To Their Deaths From Toronto Highrise

    Homicide Detectives Investigating After Soldier, Woman Fall To Their Deaths From Toronto Highrise
    Poilce say the bodies of Robert Giblin, 43, and Precious Charbonneau, 33, were found Sunday night after apparently falling from a highrise in central Toronto.

    Homicide Detectives Investigating After Soldier, Woman Fall To Their Deaths From Toronto Highrise

    Alberta's Finance Minister Says Low Oil May Delay Programs, Initiatives

    Alberta's Finance Minister Says Low Oil May Delay Programs, Initiatives
    Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci says millions of dollars in initiatives promised by the NDP government may be delayed due to low oil prices.

    Alberta's Finance Minister Says Low Oil May Delay Programs, Initiatives

    At Least 2 Canadians In Hospital After Driver Hits Pedestrians In Las Vegas

    At Least 2 Canadians In Hospital After Driver Hits Pedestrians In Las Vegas
    A hospital spokeswoman says two Canadians are among five people in either critical or serious condition after a woman intentionally drove her car into pedestrians on a sidewalk outside a Las Vegas casino.

    At Least 2 Canadians In Hospital After Driver Hits Pedestrians In Las Vegas

    Ontario Mom Disappointed At Reactions To Her Breastfeeding On Santa's Lap

    Ontario Mom Disappointed At Reactions To Her Breastfeeding On Santa's Lap
    Rebecca Dunbar says she had the picture taken mostly as a joke, but decided to post it in a bid to increase acceptance of the practice of nursing in public.

    Ontario Mom Disappointed At Reactions To Her Breastfeeding On Santa's Lap

    Dashing To The Store, Poll Suggests Most Canadians Haven't Done Holiday Shopping

    Dashing To The Store, Poll Suggests Most Canadians Haven't Done Holiday Shopping
    A poll suggests most Canadians will be spending some time over the next few days elbowing their way through crowded stores to buy that last holiday gift

    Dashing To The Store, Poll Suggests Most Canadians Haven't Done Holiday Shopping

    Missing Cheetah In B.C.'s Interior Still On The Lam, Calgary Zoo Offers To Help

    Missing Cheetah In B.C.'s Interior Still On The Lam, Calgary Zoo Offers To Help
    As of Sunday evening, conservation officers were still urging people to phone in any sightings of the big cat.

    Missing Cheetah In B.C.'s Interior Still On The Lam, Calgary Zoo Offers To Help