Crossing the Threshold: Negotiating Space in the Vernacular Houses of the Isle of Lewis |
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Authors: | Catriona Mackie |
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Institution: | Catriona Mackie, Centre for Manx Studies, University of Liverpool, The Stable Building, The University Centre, Old Castletown Road, Douglas, Isle of Man, 1M2 1QB Email: c.mackie@liverpool.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | This paper explores the construction of boundaries and thresholds as a means to examine the ways in which space is delineated and used within the house. Focusing on examples of vernacular housing from the Isle of Lewis, the most northerly of the Western Isles, the types of boundaries and thresholds that existed within the house are examined, alongside their role in establishing, reinforcing and manipulating social relationships among the inhabitants, both human and animal. As the houses in Lewis developed during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries AD, boundaries and thresholds lost or gained significance as they were moved, adapted, added and abandoned. Such developments reflected not only changing social conventions, but also the changing relationship between Lewis tenants and their cattle. |
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