Freud for Architects

Freud for Architects

Abell, John

Taylor & Francis Ltd

11/2020

138

Dura

Inglês

9781138390676

15 a 20 dias

453

Descrição não disponível.
1. Introduction. The psyche, aesthetic experience, and architecture Reading Freud, psychoanalytic theory, and clinical practice. Social influence, psychotherapeutic design, wild analysis, and architectural "aeffects". Outline of the book. 2. Freud and modernity: selfhood and emancipatory self-determination. Freud and Vienna: modernity and culture. Contrasting architectural preferences in fin-de-siecle Vienna. The Interpretation of Dreams, 1900. Psychical selfhood and self-determination. Trauma, repression, architecture of screen memories, remembering, repeating, and working through. Cultural screens, disconnection, negation, and affirmation. Conclusion. 3. Aesthetic experience: the object, empathy, the unconscious, and architectural design. Unconsciously projecting oneself and intuiting the shape or form of an art object: Semper, Vischer, Schmarsow, Woelfflin, Giedion, and Moholy-Nagy. Stone and phantasy, smooth and rough. Inside-outside corners, birth trauma, and character armor. The turbulent section and the Paranoid Critical Method. Asymmetric blur zones and the uncanny. Conclusion. 4. Open form, the formless, and "that oceanic feeling". Architectural formlessness, not literal formlessness. Freud and the spatialities of the psychical apparatus. Phases of psychical development in childhood. The oral phase. Repression. Blurred zones and architectural empathy for formlessness. Conclusion. 5. Closed-form, rule-based composition and control of the architectural gift. The second phase of development, the anal phase, and struggles over control of a gift. Threshold practices: isolation, repetition, procedures for handling objects, and diverting impulses. A brief history of closed-form, rule-based composition and control of the architectural gift. House II. Conclusion. 6. Architectural simulation: wishful phantasy and the real. The third phase of development, the phallic phase: a wish and overcoming prohibitions against the wish. Simulation, wishes, and world views. "Vertical Horizon" and the plot of phallic phantasy. Conclusion. 7. Spaces of social encounter: freedoms and constraints. The last phase of development in childhood, the genital phase, and the search for obtainable objects. Open slab versus regime room: empathy for freedom versus constraint in spaces of social encounter. Conclusion. Conclusion. Further Reading. References. Index.
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Freud's Thought;Blurred Zone;architecture and psychoanalytic theory;Freud's Observations;psychology of design;Ideational Representative;Architectural Empathy and the Unconscious;Oceanic Feelings;The Formless and Spatial Connectedness;Vice Versa;Orderly Composition and Control Fantasy;Architectural Simulation;Perfect Acts of Architecture;Threshold Practices;Avant-Garde and Tradition;Oral Phase;Freud;Anal Phase;architecture;Vertical Horizon;psychoanalytic theory;Psychical Apparatus;architectural creativity;Freud's Italics;Freud's writings;Architect Daniel Libeskind;architectural experience;Architect Rem Koolhaas;Freud's System;Phallic Phantasy;Architectural Object;Aesthetic Experience;Le Corbusier;Repressed Impulses;Baroque;Shopping Arcade;Design Composition