ABSTRACT

This book explores how psychoanalysis and architecture can enhance and increase the chances of mental 'containment', while also fostering exchange between inside and outside. The way in which psychoanalysts take care of mental suffering, and the way in which architects and city planners assess the environment, are grounded in a shared concern with the notion of 'dwelling'. It is a matter of fact that dwelling exists in a complex context comprised of both biological need and symbolic function. Psychoanalysis and architecture can work together in both thinking about and designing not only our homes but also the analyst's consulting rooms and, more generally, our therapy places. However, this is possible only if they renounce the current limited and restrictive model of this interaction, and propose one more that is more in harmony with the questions and situations that clients themselves pose.

chapter One|16 pages

The origins of a meeting

chapter Two|14 pages

Fruitful contaminations

chapter Three|9 pages

The metaphorical architecture of mind

chapter Four|12 pages

The space

chapter Five|28 pages

Architecture between past, present, and future

chapter Seven|10 pages

The haste in the world around us

chapter Eight|13 pages

The uncanny

chapter Ten|18 pages

The house

chapter Eleven|20 pages

Therapy places

chapter Twelve|29 pages

The analyst's consulting room*