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Full Description
Rethinking the Psychology of Place presents a new approach to Professor David Canter's 1977 Psychology of Place. Providing a unified Theory of Place relevant to human transactions with buildings, cities and nature, the book weaves together psychological, architectural and social perspectives to demonstrate that place is a dynamic phenomenon emerging from embodied experience, memory and social interactions. Central to this are 'place rules' and 'environmental roles' that mediate how individuals relate to and behave within locations, challenging deterministic notions that design directly causes place experiences.
Supported by over 160 illustrations, the book advances a nuanced, human-centred understanding of place an evolving, dynamic nexus of action, meaning and form by:
• Examining the home as an emotionally layered construct central to experiences of place
• Positioning architecture as a filter of sensory input and a vehicle of symbolic meaning, shaped by cultural templates, architectural styles and building types
• Using techniques such as space syntax to illustrate how spatial arrangements facilitate human interactions at both the building and metropolitan scale
• Critiquing modernist architecture's abstraction of meaning
• Highlighting streets as vital, participatory spaces, while considering how digital culture reshapes how we are present in these environments
• Challenging dominant biocentric explanations for the restorative benefits of nature and related explorations of preferences for landscapes and place attachment, offering an alternative that emphasises human agency, culture and context.
By integrating concepts such as place attachment, domocentricity and environmental roles, this book will appeal to students and researchers in environmental psychology, architecture, landscape design, urban planning and environmental sociology, as well as the general reader looking to understand our interactions with our surroundings. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the complex relationships between people and their built and natural environments.
Contents
List of Figures, List of Tables, Prologue, The Book Ahead, Introduction, Chapter 1: What Is a Place?, Chapter 2: Making Places Happen, Section I: Exploring Places, Chapter 3: Studying the Psychology of Places, Chapter 4: Active Engagement with Places, Chapter 5: Expanding Explorations of Place Experience, Section II: Buildings, Chapter 6: Home as the Archetypal Place, Chapter 7: How Architecture Works, Chapter 8: The Functions of Architecture, Chapter 9: The Grammar of Places, Chapter 10: Signifying Places, Chapter 11: How Buildings Mean, Chapter 12: Post-Modernism and Beyond, Section III: The City, Chapter 13: The City Street, Chapter 14: Maps in Minds, Chapter 15: Place Attachment and Involvement, Section IV: Landscape, Chapter 16: Approaches to Landscape: To Use or to Dwell, Chapter 17: Preferences for Landscapes, Chapter 18: The Enigma of Restoration, Conclusions, Chapter 19: A Psychology of Places, Epilogue, Appendix: Beyond Reductionism, Selected Bibliography on Place, Acknowledgments, Index.



