Jump to content

Prefatory quote ideas: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 30:
 
—'''Charles Abrams''', ''The Future of Housing''. 1946. 
 
 
 
Line 40 ⟶ 39:
 
—Richard Wright, ca.1959.
 
 
''"What the poor need is not charity but capital, not caseworkers but co-workers. And what the rich need is a wise, honorable way of divesting themselves from their overabundance."''
Line 51:
 
 
"''Liminality '' (from the Latin word for threshold) is a term..for a variety of ''states of passage, ''through which designated members of a given culture travel at specified times...Because they occupy no fixed status in the liminal state, they are considered ambiguous beings--even dangerous--and their presence is subject to ritual regulation. Special precautions are taken to separate them from ordinary social life...[Liminal states] share a suspension of the commonplace; intermingling with unfamiliar others in strange settings; and a heightened sense of uncertainty, of things being unfinished and in process.  Although liminal passages are usually undertaken in well-mapped territory from which the voyager is expected to return, ''occasionally the process stalls....We will argue that what unites the phenomena gathered up in the term homelessness is liminality (resolved or stalled) and abeyance gone awry." ''
 
— from '''Kim Hopper''' & Jim Baumohl. "Redefining the Cursed Word: A Historical Interpretation of American Homelessness." in [Baumohl 1996].
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.