969.2
In Love with Place: Off-Grid Living and Place-Making

Wednesday, July 16, 2014: 8:40 AM
Room: 424
Oral Presentation
Phillip VANNINI , Royal Roads University, BC, Canada
Jonathan TAGGART , University of British Columbia, Canada
Why do residents of Western world live off the grid? This presentation provides answers to this question. The expression “off-the-grid,” refers to the living condition of a household or a community lying outside the electricity and natural gas infrastructure, but often also denotes disconnection from other infrastructures such as municipal water conduits, natural gas pipelines, road networks, garbage and waste collection, food supply chains, and telecommunications. Drawing from and contributing to the literatures on sense of place, rural studies, and voluntary simplicity we argue that while off-gridders embrace values typical of the voluntary simplicity philosophy, their biographical and geographical trajectories reveal that living off-grid is not a clear and free choice. The performance of the mundane complexities typical of the lifestyle renders off-grid living a uniquely radical, but also contradictory and even paradoxical, constellation of practices through which new marginal spatialities are constituted. Drawing from ethnographic fragments culled from a multi-sited ethnographic project unfolding across Canada we present a thickly descriptive look into the motives and lifestyles of off-gridders.