Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Reconstructing the American Dream: Life Inside the Tiny House Nation [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 238 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x170 mm, 48 Illustrations, color; 16 Plates, color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835951996
  • ISBN-13: 9781835951996
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 238 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x170 mm, 48 Illustrations, color; 16 Plates, color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835951996
  • ISBN-13: 9781835951996
Over the past decade, Tiny Housing has become something of a viral sensation in the US. From Instagrammable enclaves for young professionals to vast municipality-supported schemes seeking to address homelessness, tiny house sites are proliferating across the country.





This book takes a look at life inside the Tiny House Nation, shining an intimate light on a phenomenon widely celebrated in the mainstream media. The book presents textured narrative accounts from and striking images of Tiny Home residents, their homes and communities, while analysing the broader socio-economic structures shaping their lives. In so doing, it paints a compelling and complex picture of a trend at the crossroads of several key social, cultural and economic shifts, at a pivotal moment for Americas housing future.













Fundamentally, this is a book about paradoxes. The paradox of tiny housing offering freedom from the constraints of capitalism, whilst at the same time remaining embedded within capitalist systems. The paradox of those who go tiny both choosing an alternative lifestyle, and those who are pushed into tiny housing as a consequence of limited choice. The paradox of Austin, Texas, as both a countercultural enclave and hyper-capitalist tech haven. And the paradox of tiny house ethoses in Austin, as both centring community and shared assets, and individualist libertarianism. These paradoxes do not necessarily sit in opposition to one another, but are all bound up in the complexity of what tiny housing has to offer as an alternative way of living.





Despite its unattainability for all but the most privileged, the American Dream - the home-owning society, the suburban bliss, the white picket fence - remains emblematic of the residential Good Life. But in the decades since the turn of the millennium the dream has been shrunk down, expectations of a decent home literally reduced. Whilst for some this has led to forms of freedom and fulfilment, it has also contributed to the normalisation of cities so outrageously expensive that all people can afford are miniature homes on the urban periphery. As this book shows, both impacts of tiny housing are equally true, and one does not cancel out the other. Tiny housing embodies an important societal crossroads. In some respects, it offers an alternative to the prevailing housing status quo. In others, it demonstrates what options have already been taken away from us.





from the Introduction





In the rest of this book, well lead you through our exploration of tiny housing in Texas. Well start, in the next chapter, by introducing some of the places and people we encountered on our travels to set the scene. Then, the pathways chapter examines the various conditions and journeys through which people end up living tiny. As youll see, our attempt to produce a diagram of pathways to tiny living escalated into the production of a fully blown board game. We describe this diagrammatic board game to show the complex and nuanced personal and structural circumstances that lead people into tiny housing. From there, we go into three empirical chapters, focusing on economies of tiny living, the materiality of tiny housing as domestic spaces, and community culture. We then draw the book to a close, and speculate about what tiny housing means for the future of domestic life, especially in relation to the American Dream.





Throughout the book our descriptions are accompanied by photographs taken by Cian Oba-Smith, who accompanied us on our first trip to Texas in 2022. The hype around tiny housing is undoubtedly driven, in large part, by the aesthetic cultures surrounding it. Tiny homes are the picturesque, boutique, upmarket cousin of mobile homes and trailers. They are distinguished from these other types of small housing, as well argue in this book, specifically by their aesthetics. Anyone who ventures into the world of tiny housing for more than five minutes will see how thick this aesthetic culture is. From beautifully curated Instagram pages, to countless coffee table books, to Etsy shops dedicated to crafted tiny house merchandise, a key part of living tiny is enjoying and embracing its aesthetics. By working with Cian we were able to focus (literally) on these aesthetic dimensions of tiny housing. However, we were also able to capture some of whats not presented in promotional tiny house materials; the constraints, the challenges and the complexities that come along with the joy and the freedom. Were positioning this book as something of a disrupted coffee table book. On an initial flick through it might not look too different to the photography books that valorise tiny living, but youll already know, if youve read this far, that our approach is more nuanced. Our attempt has been to expose the real Tiny House Nation. Not to attack it, not to deny its beneficial impacts for a huge number of people, but to inject some nuance into the debate so that we can take forward the positives of tiny living without normalising the negatives.

Arvustused

'Although Reconstructing the American Dream is a deeply researched academic work, its imagined audience is not limited to academics... Through interviews, visits, and immersive observations, they reveal that tiny housing is not a single, coherent phenomenon. Instead, it encompasses highly curated, aspirational communities; off-grid, countercultural experiments; and philanthropic tiny home projects for formerly homeless residents. The analysis of these spaces unfolds alongside a rich and generous depiction of a diverse group of Texans, from cowboy property developers to hippie farmers. In their ethnographic writing, the authors capture the distinct cultural tensions of the U.S.





On the whole, Reconstructing the American Dream is not just a book about tiny homes. It is a lens through which we can examine how Americans imagine home, belonging, and statusand how these ideals are structured by market forces.' -- Jessie Speer, American Association of Geographers Review of Books 'Reconstructing the American Dream is a rare blend of deep ethnography, sharp cultural critique, and striking visual storytelling. Traveling through Austin and its surrounding counties, the authors uncover the wildly varied world of tiny housingfrom curated communities to off-grid experiments and charitable villages for formerly unhoused residents. Through rich interviews and immersive fieldwork, they show how going tiny is both an act of freedom and a symptom of shrinking opportunity that simultaneously challenges and reproduces the mythology of the American Dream.' -- Jessie Speer, The London School of Economics and Political Science 'This book invites you into the intriguing and growing phenomena of tiny housing in Texas. The homes have alluring aesthetics, but it is the characters - shared so wonderfully through Oba-Smiths photography and the enlivening text - that radiates beautifully through the stories of journeys, places, lives, contradictions, and triumphs over adversity, and makes this book feel so rich and lively. Much more than a celebration of tiny living, it is, as the authors'; note a disrupted coffee table book, as keen to share with the reader the complexities and challenges of tiny housing as its hopeful possibilities - brilliantly using a board game to capture these varied journeys. Rarely has robust academic work been shared so creatively and beautifully. I invite you all in to explore the tiny house nation' -- Professor Jenny Pickerill (University of Sheffield), author of Eco-Homes: People, Place and Politics 'Are tiny homes an outcome of expanded housing possibilities or a consequence of constrained options? Reconstructing the American Dream documents life inside tiny home communities in Texas to explore the different pathways, aspirations, challenges, and freedoms associated with tiny home living. Through vivid text and photographs, the book complicates the popular image of tiny homes and examines the possibilities and limits of new community forms.' -- Dr Esther Sullivan (University of Colorado), author of Manufactured Insecurity: Mobile Home Parks and Americans Tenuous Right to Place

 



 



List of Figures 



Acknowledgements



Introduction 



 



Chapter 1: Places and People 



Chapter 2: Pathways 



Vignette 1: Making 



Chapter 3: Tiny Home Economics 



Vignette 2: Inhabiting 



Chapter 4: In the Home 



Vignette 3: Immersing 



Chapter 5: Community Cultures 



 



Conclusion



 



Index 



Tiny Homes Game Board and Cards
Ella Harris is an independent creative researcher who specializes in crisis cultures and creative methods. Her previous publications include Rebranding Precarity (2020) and Encountering the World with i-Docs (2025).





Mel Nowicki is associate professor in urban geography at Oxford Brookes University, UK. She is the author of several books, including Debt Trap Nation: Family Homelessness in a Failing State.





Tim White is a researcher and writer interested in housing, cities and inequality. He is currently an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellow at the Free University of Berlin, and a visiting fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science.





Cian Oba-Smith is an Irish Nigerian photographer born and raised in London. His work focuses on communities and subcultures around the world with a particular interest in approaching subjects that are often misrepresented with a view to presenting them in an alternate light. The relationship between human experience and environment is at the core of his projects.