Sex and Real Estate: Why We Love Houses
Marjorie B. Garber. Pantheon Books, $23 (256pp) ISBN 978-0-375-42054-2
Anyone who has looked, even casually, at what are called ""shelter"" magazines, or who has engaged in the exhausting process of buying or selling property, will have been struck by the peculiarly erotic quality of the language used to describe the houses we live in or seek to own. Perhaps prompted by her own foray into real estate, Garber, author of Symptoms of Culture and Dog Love, among many other books, applies her richly stocked scholarly imagination to a consideration of the cultural role of the house. In a series of witty essays on the ""House as Mother,"" as ""Beloved,"" as ""Body,"" as ""Trophy"" and the like, Garber segues smoothly in the course of a page or two from Freud and Jung to Chaucer, Shakespeare and popular film, effectively elaborating her contention that the house is not just something on which we lavish our erotic or emotional attention in lieu of a more appropriate object, but is also ""a primary object of affection and desire."" As a professor of English at Harvard and director of its Humanity Center, Garber is an established academic. While dazzling, her erudition is not intimidating; this book is bound to prompt lively after dinner discussion and perhaps a little abashed self-recognition in the nation's suburban great rooms and downtown lofts. (July)
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Reviewed on: 05/29/2000
Genre: Nonfiction