Marcus looks at how people relate to their homes and how they define themselves. While there is a lot of attention to individuals stories she has interesting insights into the relationship between identity and where we live.
"Jung expresses poetically what a dwelling an be psychologically, what Clare Cooper Marcus calls "house as a mirror of self." xv
"A home fulfills many needs: a place of self-expression, a vessel of memories, a refuge from the outside world, a cocoon where we can feel nurtured and let down our guard. A person without a fixed abode is viewed with suspicion in our society, labeled "vagrant," "hobo," "street person."" 4
"The more stories I listened to, the more it became apparent that people consciously and unconsciously "use" their home environment to express something about themselves." 9
"We have become more self-conscious about home as a vehicle for communication and display. The neighbours, our visitors, and ourselves are the intended recipients of this communication. If you have any doubts about the extent to which homes communicate, think about the number of TV shows that began with the camera panning over the exterior of a home-Dallas, Dynasty, All in the Family, The Waltons, The Cosby Show, Roseanne, and the list goes on...A child constructing a den or clubhouse under the hedge is doing far more than merely manipulating dirt and branches. He or she is having a powerful experience of creativity, of learning about self via molding the physical environment." 12
"Our memories and dreams are our personal "library": they can be powerful motivations and inspirations, rich resources for later creative thinking." 41
"Bill clearly exemplified what two social researchers, McClelland and McCarthy concluded. The greater control we exercise over an object or an environment, the more closely allied with the self it becomes." 54
"George Herbert Mead...proposed that physical objects play a central role in the development and maintenance of our self-identity. Indeed our very identity and discrete "self" is confirmed by the objects we use and with which we surround ourselves." 63
"As G. McCracken explains: "Surrounded by our things, we are constantly instructed in who we are and what we aspire to. Surrounded by our things, we are rooted in and visually continuous with our pasts. Surrounded by our things, we are sheltered from the many forces that would deflect us into new concepts, practices, and experiences. Things are our ballast." 74
"As people approach old age and death, they live increasingly in a world of memory and reminiscence." 85
"In creating a home, we each have different needs for privacy, for order, for enclosure. As our lives progress, what we expect and need from our home may likewise change." 126
"As Thomas Moore has written in Care of the Soul, "the flowering of life depends upon finding a reflection of oneself in the world...We will never achieve the flowering of our own natures until we find that piece of ourselves that lovable twin, which lives in the world and as the world." 130
"Whether by choice or not, where you lives and what you see around you are a reflection of who you are-or who society says you are." 213
"As E.M. Forster so beautifully writes in Howard's End, "To them Howard's End was a house; they could not know that to her it had been a spirit, for which she sought a spiritual heir...It is credible that the possessions of the spirit can be bequeathed at all? Has the soul offspring? A Which-elm tree, a vine, a wisp of hay with dew on it-can passion for such things be transmitted." 247