Abstract:
Drawing on the growing areas of research on emotional embodiment, this paper develops
an understanding of the spatiality of grief as central to the discussion of young people's
experiences of homelessness. In the context of my engagement with young homeless
people in inner-city Sydney, I explore grief as central in shaping young people's everyday
body-place relations. I argue that grief over often brutal past homes continues to haunt
young people and impact on the ways in which they relate to place, including the place of
their own body. I explore young people's displacement and grief-stricken forms of
inhabitation as well and their discovery of 'therapeutic' places which allow the reformation
of more positive relations to place and self. I argue that while it is understood
that grief and trauma are key causes of homelessness amongst young people, grief is rarely
explored as an embodied practice, or as a key factor which continues to underpin
trajectories of homelessness after initial exits from home.