Litcius/Paper detail

Greening home: caring for plants indoors

Catherine Phillips, Eily Schulz

2021Australian Geographer12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Plants are widely advocated as beneficial for indoor, urban environments; however, research into how people live with indoor plants in their homes remains limited. This article begins to investigate indoor plant keeping and how it is experienced and valued. Empirically, the article draws on exploratory qualitative research undertaken with houseplant keepers within the inner suburbs of Melbourne (Australia). The research shows that indoor plants are valued in diverse ways that orient around instrumental contributions of plants, caring practices within people’s homes, and extended sensibilities relating to wider social and ecological dynamics. By attending to plants as part of indoor home places, this analysis expands the empirical focus of human–plant geographies and provides future research directions to further productive conversations between urban greening and human geography.

Topics & Concepts

GreeningUrban greeningGeographyExploratory researchSociologyHuman geographyEnvironmental planningEnvironmental resource managementEcologySocial scienceEnvironmental scienceBiologyUrban Green Space and HealthUrban Agriculture and SustainabilityGeographies of human-animal interactions