Architecture and the Mimetic Self

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A01=Lucy Huskinson
analytical psychology
Architectural Event
Architectural Imagery
architecture
Author_Lucy Huskinson
being
body
Bollas's Account
Bollas’s Account
Bollingen Tower
Breuer's House
Breuer’s House
buildings
Category=AMA
Category=JMAF
Category=JMAJ
De Maistre
Defensive Strategies
environmental psychology
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
event
Evocative Architecture
Evocative Experience
Evocative Object
Freud's Building
Freud’s Building
human-environment interaction
huskinson
identity formation architecture
Imaginative Perception
Iron Gate
Literal Perception
mimetic
Mimetic Identification
Mundane Buildings
Non-directed Thinking
Nonhuman Environment
Nonhuman Objects
Paranoid Critical Method
phenomenology of space
psychoanalytic
psychoanalytic built environment
Round Room
Santiago Calatrava
self
Skin Ego
Specific Architectural Features
Teddy Bear
unconscious
unconscious spatial experience

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415693042
  • Weight: 1200g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Buildings shape our identity and sense of self in profound ways that are not always evident to architects and town planners, or even to those who think they are intimately familiar with the buildings they inhabit. Architecture and the Mimetic Self provides a useful theoretical guide to our unconscious behaviour in relation to buildings, and explains both how and why we are drawn to specific elements and features of architectural design. It reveals how even the most uninspiring of buildings can be modified to meet our unconscious expectations and requirements of them—and, by the same token, it explores the repercussions for our wellbeing when buildings fail to do so.

Criteria for effective architectural design have for a long time been grounded in utilitarian and aesthetic principles of function, efficiency, cost, and visual impact. Although these are important considerations, they often fail to meet the fundamental needs of those who inhabit and use buildings. Misconceptions are rife, not least because our responses to architecture are often difficult to measure, and are in large part unconscious. By bridging psychoanalytic thought and architectural theory, Architecture and the Mimetic Self frees the former from its preoccupations with interpersonal human relations to address the vital relationships that we establish with our nonhuman environments.

In addition to providing a guide to the unconscious behaviours that are most relevant for evaluating architectural design, this book explains how our relationships with the built environment inform a more expansive and useful psychoanalytic theory of human relationship and identity. It will appeal to psychoanalysts and analytical psychologists, architects, and all who are interested in the overlaps of psychology, architecture, and the built environment.

Lucy Huskinson, Ph.D, is Senior Lecturer in the School of History, Philosophy, and Social Sciences at Bangor University, UK. She is author and editor of various books and articles on philosophy, psychoanalysis, and the built environment, and co Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Jungian Studies.

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