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From warming bodies to heating spaces : Using feminist energy justice and oral histories to unpack home heating transitions in Europe, 1945-present

von Platten, Jenny LU ; Davies, Kathy ; Kilpeläinen, Sarah ; Vornicu, Andreea ; Ambrose, Aimee and Palm, Jenny LU (2025) In Energy Research and Social Science 121.
Abstract

Home heating transitions influence sociocultural practices and bring about structural changes in daily life. To uncover the power dynamics underpinning these transformations, this paper applies a visionary framework for feminist energy systems designed to challenge hegemonic and unsustainable energy cultures in pursuit of a more just and equitable future. Drawing on the framework's political, economic, socio-ecological, and technological dimensions, we analyse a pan-European collection of 284 oral histories, documenting individuals' memories of past heating arrangements and transitions to new heating systems, collected through the JustHeat project. The project aims to combine reflections on past experiences with visions for the future,... (More)

Home heating transitions influence sociocultural practices and bring about structural changes in daily life. To uncover the power dynamics underpinning these transformations, this paper applies a visionary framework for feminist energy systems designed to challenge hegemonic and unsustainable energy cultures in pursuit of a more just and equitable future. Drawing on the framework's political, economic, socio-ecological, and technological dimensions, we analyse a pan-European collection of 284 oral histories, documenting individuals' memories of past heating arrangements and transitions to new heating systems, collected through the JustHeat project. The project aims to combine reflections on past experiences with visions for the future, revealing new insights into the conditions of contemporary home heating transitions. The research, conducted across Sweden, Finland, Romania, and the UK, deepens our understanding of how heating transitions have driven sociocultural shifts, such as the shift from warming bodies to heating spaces and from embodied to concealed heating practices. While these changes may have offered greater convenience, our findings reveal that they often came at the expense of reduced enjoyment, less social interaction, and decreased care work associated with keeping warm. By applying the feminist energy systems framework to our findings, this study highlights how dominant power structures, including technomasculinity and ‘green growth’ ideologies, have shaped home heating transitions, de-politicised them, and overlooked relational aspects of energy systems in favour of increased productivity and efficiency. These findings support challenging hegemonic power structures to envision and realise more desirable and inclusive energy transitions, grounded in care, equity and relational sustainability.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Energy transition, Feminist energy systems, Home heating, Oral histories
in
Energy Research and Social Science
volume
121
article number
103974
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85217515970
ISSN
2214-6296
DOI
10.1016/j.erss.2025.103974
project
Looking back, moving forwards: a social and cultural history of home heating
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Authors
id
34809b5a-2e28-4e33-b34d-746d127ab5ae
date added to LUP
2025-02-20 14:58:33
date last changed
2025-04-04 15:06:14
@article{34809b5a-2e28-4e33-b34d-746d127ab5ae,
  abstract     = {{<p>Home heating transitions influence sociocultural practices and bring about structural changes in daily life. To uncover the power dynamics underpinning these transformations, this paper applies a visionary framework for feminist energy systems designed to challenge hegemonic and unsustainable energy cultures in pursuit of a more just and equitable future. Drawing on the framework's political, economic, socio-ecological, and technological dimensions, we analyse a pan-European collection of 284 oral histories, documenting individuals' memories of past heating arrangements and transitions to new heating systems, collected through the JustHeat project. The project aims to combine reflections on past experiences with visions for the future, revealing new insights into the conditions of contemporary home heating transitions. The research, conducted across Sweden, Finland, Romania, and the UK, deepens our understanding of how heating transitions have driven sociocultural shifts, such as the shift from warming bodies to heating spaces and from embodied to concealed heating practices. While these changes may have offered greater convenience, our findings reveal that they often came at the expense of reduced enjoyment, less social interaction, and decreased care work associated with keeping warm. By applying the feminist energy systems framework to our findings, this study highlights how dominant power structures, including technomasculinity and ‘green growth’ ideologies, have shaped home heating transitions, de-politicised them, and overlooked relational aspects of energy systems in favour of increased productivity and efficiency. These findings support challenging hegemonic power structures to envision and realise more desirable and inclusive energy transitions, grounded in care, equity and relational sustainability.</p>}},
  author       = {{von Platten, Jenny and Davies, Kathy and Kilpeläinen, Sarah and Vornicu, Andreea and Ambrose, Aimee and Palm, Jenny}},
  issn         = {{2214-6296}},
  keywords     = {{Energy transition; Feminist energy systems; Home heating; Oral histories}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Energy Research and Social Science}},
  title        = {{From warming bodies to heating spaces : Using feminist energy justice and oral histories to unpack home heating transitions in Europe, 1945-present}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2025.103974}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.erss.2025.103974}},
  volume       = {{121}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}