This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological life space/s produced in a mental health service user’s home. Drawing on arguments that space plays an important part in the organisation and management of mental distress, photographs of a service user’s home are analysed as topological spaces. The article argues that topological theory can contribute to community health psychology through framing psychological distress as spatially distributed, meaning individual bodies, environments and action are conceptualised as equally contributing to the organisation and management of health-related experience and activity
The impact of social and material conditions on mental health is well established but lacking in a c...
In this article, we present an argument for a psychoanalytic understanding of space. While Freud str...
The deinstitutionalization of mental health institutions has enabled service users to live in the co...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
Sel f-care in the l i fe spaces of home This paper develops a topological approach derived from Kurt...
Theorising psychological activity as a spatial product appears a logical extension of moves in socia...
This article develops a conceptualization of 'space' that enables in-depth analysis of mental health...
The change from an institutional to community care model of mental health services can be seen as a ...
This paper explores the perceptions of the spatiality of individuals who self-harm, with the aim of ...
Since the closure of the UK asylums, ‘the community’ has become short hand for describing a variety ...
The impact of social and material conditions on mental health is well established but lacking in a c...
In this article, we present an argument for a psychoanalytic understanding of space. While Freud str...
The deinstitutionalization of mental health institutions has enabled service users to live in the co...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
This article develops a topological approach derived from Kurt Lewin to analyse the psychological li...
Sel f-care in the l i fe spaces of home This paper develops a topological approach derived from Kurt...
Theorising psychological activity as a spatial product appears a logical extension of moves in socia...
This article develops a conceptualization of 'space' that enables in-depth analysis of mental health...
The change from an institutional to community care model of mental health services can be seen as a ...
This paper explores the perceptions of the spatiality of individuals who self-harm, with the aim of ...
Since the closure of the UK asylums, ‘the community’ has become short hand for describing a variety ...
The impact of social and material conditions on mental health is well established but lacking in a c...
In this article, we present an argument for a psychoanalytic understanding of space. While Freud str...
The deinstitutionalization of mental health institutions has enabled service users to live in the co...