The Contested Homeless Body: An Embodied Approach to Researching Women’s Experiences of Homelessness
Earle-Brown, H
Date: 14 April 2025
Thesis or dissertation
Publisher
University of Exeter
Degree Title
PhD in Geography
Abstract
Homeless women have been underrepresented in research surrounding homelessness, resulting in their experiences and needs being overlooked. This
thesis takes a gendered approach to researching homelessness, using the body as
the conceptual framework to build a deeper understanding of women’s experiences
of homelessness. An embodied ...
Homeless women have been underrepresented in research surrounding homelessness, resulting in their experiences and needs being overlooked. This
thesis takes a gendered approach to researching homelessness, using the body as
the conceptual framework to build a deeper understanding of women’s experiences
of homelessness. An embodied approach makes space for the messiness, emotions,
feelings, identities and performances of homelessness to be brought to light;
experiences which have rarely been attended to within geography to date.
This thesis argues that taking an embodied approach allows a richer picture of
women’s homelessness to be built. It considers how homeless women experience
violence, emotions and trauma; and how these experiences are embodied and
shape women’s perceptions of their self and bodies. It explores how homeless
women experience disempowerment and low self-esteem in the lives, considering
the lack of power they have in reproductive decisions; clothing and grooming their
bodies; and the impact this has on their sense of self. The thesis also presents an
additional perspective, presenting homeless women as agentic and resilient. It
considers how this agency might be enacted through particular performances and
presentations of their bodies; and through engaging in different home-making
practices. This thesis deepens understandings of the challenges women face when
experiencing homelessness, whilst also challenging understandings of homeless
women that consider them as powerless victims of their circumstances.
This thesis argues that an embodied approach not only allows for an alternative
reading of homeless women that presents them as agentic and resourceful; but it
opens up exciting opportunities for Geographers to explore new and different
approaches to homelessness.
Doctoral Theses
Doctoral College
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