Based on fi eldwork among homesteaders in the US Pacifi c Northwest, this article
explores particular ways in which home is created and sustained in the light
of the homesteaders’ ideals of becoming one with nature. The article focuses on
how construction of houses is guided by such ideals and shows how the merging
of home and nature is also taking place at a mundane level in social interaction.
When building a house the homesteaders are seeking to discard standard urban
ideas about which materials to use and how to furnish houses. In a long debate
about how to deal with the fact that rats have entered the common kitchen, naturalisation
and humanisation of both people and animals are employed in order
to create a common ground. In sum the article argues that the homesteaders’
practises are serving both their effort to stand out from “mainstream” or “suburban”
America as part of an ideological project to establish alternative ways of
living, and that they also express a more existential struggle to create spaces of
harmony and personal control in a modern world characterised by consumerism
and globalisation.
Keywords: Nature, U.S.A., alternative life styles, home.
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