Bringing together an international group of contributors, who provide informed and varied points of view on the role of the unconscious in architectural design and theory, this book expands architectural theory to unexplored areas, enriching architecture in relation to the humanities.
Bringing together an international group of contributors, who provide informed and varied points of view on the role of the unconscious in architectural design and theory, this book expands architectural theory to unexplored areas, enriching architecture in relation to the humanities.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
John Hendrix is a professor at the University of Lincoln, UK, and Roger Williams University, US. He has authored and edited several books on architecture, philosophy and psychoanalysis, including Unconscious Thought in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis, The Contradiction between Form and Function in Architecture, The Cultural Role of Architecture, Architecture as Cosmology, Architecture and Psychoanalysis, and Architectural Forms and Philosophical Structures. Lorens Holm is Reader in Architecture and Director of the Geddes Institute for Urban Research at the University of Dundee. He has taught at the Architectural Association, the Bartlett, the Mackintosh, and Washington University in St. Louis. His teaching/research focusses on the thought threads that link architecture, philosophy and psychoanalysis, in so far they concern cities, space and machines. Publications include Brunelleschi, Lacan, Le Corbusier: architecture, space and the construction of subjectivity (Routledge 2010). His papers have appeared in The Journal of Architecture, Perspecta, Critical Quarterly, Architecture Theory Review, and Assemblage.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction I: Historical Paradigms for Architecture and the Unconscious 1: The Unconscious and Space: Venice and the Work of Albrecht Dürer 2: Architecture and the Kantian Unconscious 3: Gradations of Consciousness and Claude Bragdon's 'Space-Conquest' 4: Composing Form, Constructing the Unconscious: Empiriocriticism and Nikolai Ladovskii's 'Psychoanalytical Method' of Architecture at VKhUTEMAS II: The Unconscious as a Discourse for Architecture of the City 5: Aldo Rossi and the Field of the Other 6: Seducing God(s): Renaissance Ideal Cities as Mirror-images of Western Subjectivity 7: Unconscious Places - Thomas Struth and the Architecture of the City 8: X Marks the Spot that Will Have Been III: Fantasies, Desires, Diagnoses 9: Psychoanalytic Diagnosis in Architecture and Urban Design 10: Architecture and the Unconscious: Fantasy, Construction, and the Dual Spatiality 11: Shadows of Venice: Adrian Stokes, Aldo Rossi and 'Interior Darkness' IV: Case Study: Maison de Verre 12: Projection: On Approaching the Maison de Verre 13: Imaginative Enclave in the Maison de Verre 14: Part-architecture: The Manifest and the Hidden in the Maison de Verre and the Large Glass (or Towards an Architectural Unconscious)
Introduction I: Historical Paradigms for Architecture and the Unconscious 1: The Unconscious and Space: Venice and the Work of Albrecht Dürer 2: Architecture and the Kantian Unconscious 3: Gradations of Consciousness and Claude Bragdon's 'Space-Conquest' 4: Composing Form, Constructing the Unconscious: Empiriocriticism and Nikolai Ladovskii's 'Psychoanalytical Method' of Architecture at VKhUTEMAS II: The Unconscious as a Discourse for Architecture of the City 5: Aldo Rossi and the Field of the Other 6: Seducing God(s): Renaissance Ideal Cities as Mirror-images of Western Subjectivity 7: Unconscious Places - Thomas Struth and the Architecture of the City 8: X Marks the Spot that Will Have Been III: Fantasies, Desires, Diagnoses 9: Psychoanalytic Diagnosis in Architecture and Urban Design 10: Architecture and the Unconscious: Fantasy, Construction, and the Dual Spatiality 11: Shadows of Venice: Adrian Stokes, Aldo Rossi and 'Interior Darkness' IV: Case Study: Maison de Verre 12: Projection: On Approaching the Maison de Verre 13: Imaginative Enclave in the Maison de Verre 14: Part-architecture: The Manifest and the Hidden in the Maison de Verre and the Large Glass (or Towards an Architectural Unconscious)
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