This essay investigates the role of space and personal action in the construction of patient–psychiatrist relations at psychiatric hospitals. In order to explore such a theme, the writings of R.D. Laing prove to be salutary. This is namely accredited to Laing's tenet that the staff and patients of a psychiatric hospital are institutionalised by both physical structures and personal action. A central approach taken in this essay is to explore Laing's theory through an inter-textual reading of Michel Foucault's Madness and Civilization (1967) and Erving Goffman's Asylums (1961).http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/csos20hb2013ay201
This article deals with questions related with the insertion of a health professional in a manicomia...
Institutional care buildings have been largely transformed as the psychiatric field has undergone si...
Objectives. Research has shown interpersonal relationships influence experiences of inpatient psychi...
Psychiatric hospitals by and large fulfil a dual function: historically, they derive from societies'...
The climate or atmosphere of a ward in secure psychiatric care is typically studied by examining the...
Spatial human experiences such as confinement and freedom are important to acute psychiatric care. T...
The climate or atmosphere of a ward in secure psychiatric care is typically studied by examining the...
The pluralism that characterized the development of psychiatric services around the world created a ...
Mental illness historically has followed an uneven path regarding the social integration and the the...
In conjunction with the recent critical assessments of the life and work of R.D. Laing, this paper s...
In 1953 the American Psychiatric Association established an Architectural Study Project in collabora...
The importance of architecture to clinical and psychiatric care is widely asserted. Foucault's writi...
A sociological conceptualisation of space moves beyond the material to the relational, to consider s...
This paper delves into the world of medical and Army psychiatric practice in Britain during the 1950...
A sociological conceptualisation of space moves beyond the material to the relational, to consider s...
This article deals with questions related with the insertion of a health professional in a manicomia...
Institutional care buildings have been largely transformed as the psychiatric field has undergone si...
Objectives. Research has shown interpersonal relationships influence experiences of inpatient psychi...
Psychiatric hospitals by and large fulfil a dual function: historically, they derive from societies'...
The climate or atmosphere of a ward in secure psychiatric care is typically studied by examining the...
Spatial human experiences such as confinement and freedom are important to acute psychiatric care. T...
The climate or atmosphere of a ward in secure psychiatric care is typically studied by examining the...
The pluralism that characterized the development of psychiatric services around the world created a ...
Mental illness historically has followed an uneven path regarding the social integration and the the...
In conjunction with the recent critical assessments of the life and work of R.D. Laing, this paper s...
In 1953 the American Psychiatric Association established an Architectural Study Project in collabora...
The importance of architecture to clinical and psychiatric care is widely asserted. Foucault's writi...
A sociological conceptualisation of space moves beyond the material to the relational, to consider s...
This paper delves into the world of medical and Army psychiatric practice in Britain during the 1950...
A sociological conceptualisation of space moves beyond the material to the relational, to consider s...
This article deals with questions related with the insertion of a health professional in a manicomia...
Institutional care buildings have been largely transformed as the psychiatric field has undergone si...
Objectives. Research has shown interpersonal relationships influence experiences of inpatient psychi...