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Freedom and the Cage: Modern Architecture and Psychiatry in Central Europe, 1890 1914
Contributor(s): Topp, Leslie (Author)
ISBN: 0271077107     ISBN-13: 9780271077109
Publisher: Penn State University Press
OUR PRICE:   $123.70  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: March 2017
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Architecture | Buildings - Public, Commercial & Industrial
- Architecture | History - Modern (late 19th Century To 1945)
- History | Europe - Austria & Hungary
Dewey: 725.520
LCCN: 2016034219
Series: Buildings, Landscapes, and Societies
Physical Information: 1" H x 9.3" W x 10.2" (2.90 lbs) 256 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 19th Century
- Cultural Region - Central Europe
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Spurred by ideals of individual liberty that took hold in the Western world in the late nineteenth century, psychiatrists and public officials sought to reinvent asylums as large-scale, totally designed institutions that offered a level of freedom and normality impossible in the outside world. This volume explores the "caged freedom" that this new psychiatric ethos represented by analyzing seven such buildings established in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy between the late 1890s and World War I.

In the last two decades of the Habsburg Empire, architects of asylums began to abandon traditional corridor-based plans in favor of looser formations of connected villas, echoing through design the urban- and freedom-oriented impulse of the progressive architecture of the time. Leslie Topp considers the paradoxical position of designs that promoted an illusion of freedom even as they exercised careful social and spatial control over patients. In addition to discussing the physical and social aspects of these institutions, Topp shows how the commissioned buildings were symptomatic of larger cultural changes and of the modern asylum's straining against its ideological anchorage in a premodern past of "unenlightened" restraint on human liberty.

Working at the intersection of the history of architecture and the history of psychiatry, Freedom and the Cage broadens our understanding of the complexity and fluidity of modern architecture's engagement with the state, with social and medical projects, and with mental health, psychiatry, and psychology.


Contributor Bio(s): Topp, Leslie: - Leslie Topp is Senior Lecturer in the History of Architecture at Birkbeck, University of London, and the author of Architecture and Truth in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.