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Adolescence
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Advertisement
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Architecture
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Art
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Boredom
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Car
(15)
Cheap Machines
(3)
Climate Control
(4)
Decentering
(15)
Discontinuity
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Dishwasher
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Easy Debt
(6)
Education
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Film
(10)
Garage
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Habit/Habitus
(2)
Historical Deafness
(4)
Home/Homeownership
(19)
Industrial Invasion
(9)
Inversions/Reversals
(12)
Kitchen
(6)
Liminal Space
(9)
Literature
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Mall
(29)
Middleground
(14)
Myth
(29)
Networks
(2)
Nuclear Family
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Partially Homogenized
(24)
Planning
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Practice
(6)
Privatization
(11)
Project Focus
(19)
Race
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Roads
(11)
Sci-Fi
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Sex
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Shallow Roots
(7)
Speed
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Sprawl
(9)
Stuff
(12)
Suburban Ecology
(13)
Suburban Museum
(6)
Surface Tension
(5)
Technology
(6)
Television
(4)
The Aesthetics of Organization
(13)
The Agrarian
(17)
The Commuter
(10)
The Fragment
(3)
The Housewife
(22)
The Individual
(1)
The Temple of Domesticity
(12)
Values
(6)
Wasteland
(5)
Wilderness
(16)
Work/Home
(3)
Yard
(16)
The suburbanite defines himself by what he is not. He is not exactly natural. He is not exactly social. His arrangement of his immediate environment tends to reinforce this negative relation. He has a lawn, but it is manicured. He has a house, but it is detached. His job represents a going-away to society, and can be kept well detached from his home as well.