Usable pasts Caregiving as a public, physical matter
Usable pasts
Caregiving as a public, physical matter
Gutman
Marta
Gutman, Marta
Author
Author
University of California, Berkeley
Center for Working Families
University of California, Berkeley. Center for Working Families
Sponsor
Sponsor
text
working paper
Berkeley, CA Center for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley 2001 2001 monographic
Berkeley, CA
Berkeley, CA
Center for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley
2001
2001
monographic
English eng
English
eng
electronic application/pdf 42 p. born digital
electronic
application/pdf
42 p.
born digital
In this working paper, I argue that caregiving is a public, physical matter, as well as a personal and social need. The principal example is a ten-acre site in North Oakland that the Ladies' Relief Society developed into an important node in the city's landscape of charity during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. I review the history of the site and discuss present-day controversies concerning the restoration of the Studio One Arts Center to show that we have a “usable past” concerning caregiving. Attending to the changing landscapes of urban architecture gives a useful insight into the state of social and civic infrastructures designed to meet the needs of contemporary working families. On this large parcel of urban land, material culture — the architecture of the place – instantiates and celebrates public solutions to private needs. Taken together, the buildings in this setting meet a variety of needs associated with the life cycle of contemporary working families, drawing people from all walks of life to a place that was once segregated along racial lines. Nevertheless, the buildings reveal the contours of class, gender, race, and other social relations that continue to affect caregiving in the present day (as they did historically). The history of the site, particularly the story of Studio One, also sheds light on the causes and potential solutions to the much-touted decline of civic infrastructures in contemporary American society.
Marta Gutman, historian and architect, is a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Working Families.
Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper No. 24
Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper No. 24
Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper
No. 24
Use of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons "Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States" (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/)
wfn_bwpaper_26.pdf
wfn_bwpaper_26.pdf
MChB English eng
MChB
English eng
English
eng