Postwar Britain focuses on a home-centered society as the foundation of the working nation, a home-centered is a symbol for the end of the war in Britain. This is so because, in times of war, people never had a place they could call home. This desire to have a home is a key reason why Britain fought so hard to win this war so that the society can rejuvenate its self in this ideal environment called home. After the war was over, people, with satisfaction the people started to build the home of their own. The Government as build homes for those who were not able to do so. After the war was all over and homes build for all, research was conducted to access how the people felt about their home, and below are some views and opinions about the meaning of home in post-war Britain. (Langhamer April 2005)
A home-based society reconfigured the gender roles where the men took their natural role to provide for their families. Women were also empowered and afforded more protection by the law. Even after the end of the war in the 1950s a considerable section of the British people remained excluded from the home-centered society: housing needs remained a crucial political issue. Fundamentally, then, a focus upon the home, its significance, meanings, and the lived experiences and relationships within it allow us to explore the tension between past, present, and future within postwar Britain and encourages us to see the 1950s as a period of instability rather than unthinking smug conventionality’.” (Langhamer April 2005)
It’s a warm, comfortable, and pleasant place to live in. It’s that place ideal for a nuclear family to live in and enjoy the benefits of living in a home which includes a right to privacy and uncensored communication.
A home is a symbol of the reconstruction of the postwar, a beacon of hope, and a reward of wartime sufferance. A home is a center for human life without which something is missing. Home means that breathtaking place characterized with Leisure, privacy, leisure, comfort, courtesy, and forgetfulness of the war.
Home means a place where one can relax, can have and keep his possessions and use them at wish, a place where one works at own speed or not to work at all. Home also means a place where one can choose what music to listen to, what books to keep or read, how to arrange furniture, or what flowers and pictures to keep. A place where one can feel safe and protected.
A home is a place where your family is secure, sheltered with happiness and comradeship filling the home’ air. Home is the location for personal artifacts, a place associated with actual physical comfort, and a psychic space within which to establish and develop personal and family identities.
A home is the symbol of reconstruction of postwar, a beacon of hope and a reward of the wartime sufferance. A home is the centre for human life without which something is missing. Home means that breathtaking place characterized with Leisure, privacy, leisure, comfort, courtesy and forgetfulness of the war.
It in a home that the old, young and middle-aged get each other’s point of view without disrespecting each over or demanding certain standards to be observed in such conversations. A happy home and family life is the bulwark of a Nation. A home life was both dream and reality for middle-class, and increasing numbers of working-class, families prior to the Second World War. It is a place one wants to have of his own.
Home means ‘a loving wife, an easy chair, a comfortable bed, a real cup of coffee, a good wireless set, a number of books……It is practically everything. It’s mighty fine to come home after a long day to see the wife and hear the kids. Home is a place where you can have a tea which always is above minimum requirements and then, in summer, to poke around in the garden, in winter to sit on top of the fire, to read or fall asleep.
A home is one of the most common leisure-time occupations. A place where a child will goes for lunch when it feels hunger, a place where a child or an adult will go sekking for comfort and a place where both children and adults will go when home time comes to relax and to stretch their bones after a long and tedious work day in readiness for a better tomorrow. A home’ is a home and there can never be one central definition to it because it means so many different things to different people. However one can point out that a home-centered society brought a satisfaction among the people of Britain a satisfaction that could not have been achieved by any other alternative apart from adopting a home-centered society. A home is a place a person cannot live without and a yard stick society uses to measure a person’s success or direction. we all toil to have a home’
A Home is a warm, comfortable and pleasant place to live in. A place where you own and you have unlimited rights to do everything you need to do independently such as invite my friends or be on my own, sleep at any time and wake up, to cook whatever food you feel like, to share it with whoever without an fear or intimidation from any quarter. A home is a place where a person is in the company of people of person who love him best and he loves them best thus affords ever member of the society to demonstrate their love to other in the best way they can. It a place you never known its meaning until you get one and keep your family in it.
A home is practically everything. It’s mighty fine to come home after a long day and see your wife or hear the kids. An opportunity do everything within the confinement of a home’’ to promote the welfare of your home and the society at large without fear that you are doing something wrong or absconding a duty impose by the war.
A home-centered society accommodated people of different demography. This was not possible until after the war was over. The Home- center society are among the new positive developed realized in the post war Britain. A home-centered society created a new line of consumers for the goods produce by industries both in Britain and in the outside. A home-centered society therefore promoted the economy in a way it would not have developed before the war.