The Poetics of Space by Gaston Bachelard

  • Year2014
  • LanguageRussian
  • Edition3500
  • Pages352
  • BindingPaperback
  • PublisherGarage publishing program in collaboration with Ad Marginem Press
  • Price420 RUB
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Gaston Bachelard’s original thesis on the interaction between physical space, consciousness, and poetics. The philosopher explores the space people inhabit as a means of analyzing the human soul.

In what manner can physical space, consciousness and poetry be linked? Gaston Bachelard develops an original scheme for the interaction of these three elements in his work The Poetics of Space, which has become a compulsory tome in the library of any self-respecting architect.

For Bachelard, the house, in particular, has a grandiose phenomenological significance: it is a concentration point for the internal processes of human consciousness and a peculiar point of reference for all emotional experience. He thus determines upon “taking the house as a tool for analysis of the human soul,”  since, “Our soul is an abode. And by remembering ‘houses’ and ‘rooms,’ we learn to ‘abide’ within ourselves.” Bachelard begins with an account of the rooms in a human house, which are, due to the polarity between attic and cellar, possessed of a characteristic vector of inner movement. Further, objects within the house are charged with a certain energy, with wardrobes and chests being the storehouse of secrets and things hidden from view – cozy little nooks to curl up in, the dens of animals, birds’ nests, and the shells of molluscs.

Bachelard develops his investigation by making a parallel between the arrangement of a house and the ability of man to think and visualise, placing emphasis on the imagination as a major power of human nature. He packs his text with lyrical quotations, helping the reader to imagine the house as a place sewn together from poetic images, reverie and reminiscences. Thus Bachelard’s house transforms into a living manifestation of the soul, a place suffused with dim light, where our daydreams and fantasies take form.

Author

Gaston Bachelard (1884 – 1962) was a French philosopher and literature critic. His most important work is on poetics and the philosophy of science. Bachelard was hugely interested in the concept of epistemology. The influence of his thought can be felt in all disciplines of the humanities (art, architecture, literature, poetics, psychology, philosophy and language.) During his lifetime Gaston Bachelard wrote 23 books concerned with the philosophy of science and the analysis of the imagination of matter. Bachelard's work deals with many other topics, including poetry, dreams, psychoanalysis, and the imagination. The Psychoanalysis of Fire (1938) and The Poetics of Space (1958) are among the most popular of his works.

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