Negotiating Institutional Heritage and Wellbeing.
- 1st ed.
- 1 online resource (253 pages)
- Spatial Practices Series ; v.37 .
- Spatial Practices Series .
Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Figures and Tables -- Notes on Contributors -- Chapter 1 Institutions, Wellbeing and Performative Heritage -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Institutional Heritage -- 3 Heritage and/ as Collective Memory -- 4 The Chapters -- References -- Part 1 Wellbeing and Collective Memory -- Chapter 2 "It is, After All, a Churchyard": Orthodox and Heterodox Embodiments at Three Cemeteries in Gothenburg, Sweden -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Cemeteries and Modernity -- 3 A Local Study of Three Cemeteries -- 4 Fieldwork in Familiar and Alien Space -- 5 Spatial Embodiments and the Issue of Orthodoxy -- 6 Doxa, Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy at the Three Sites -- 7 Proximity to Death: In the Grave Quarters -- 8 Establishing Locations of Death in Urn- and Memorial Gardens -- 9 Recreation in the Margins: Park Spatiality Embodied -- 10 Heterodox Embodiments and Defenders of Doxa -- 11 Contemporary Spatialities in Light of a Lutheran History -- 12 On Space, Wellbeing and Social Access -- References -- Chapter 3 The Dead, the Living and Collective Wellbeing: The Burial Grounds of Racialized Communities in Canada -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Owen Sound -- 3 Priceville -- 4 Quebec City -- 5 The Destruction of Burial Grounds in a Wider Context -- 6 Burial Grounds and Their Consequence for Wellbeing -- References -- Chapter 4 Historic Synagogues, Jewish Heritage and Wellbeing: Connection Spanning Time and Place -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methodology -- 3 Heritage, Architecture and the Production of Culture -- 4 Wellness and Wellbeing -- 5 Progressive Jewish User Groups -- 6 Historic Synagogues -- 6.1 United Synagogue of Hoboken -- 6.2 Park Slope Jewish Center -- 6.3 Wilshire Boulevard Temple -- 7 Community Wellbeing -- 8 Psychological Wellbeing -- 9 Interpersonal Wellbeing -- 10 Conclusion -- References. Chapter 5 Recovery Projects: Haitian Memory, Humanitarian Response and the Affordances of the Digital Disaster Archive -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Space of Disaster -- 3 Sivivian pou Sivivian: Memwa Ayisyen: Local Storytelling as a Model for Wellbeing -- 4 Oral Heritage as Healing: Resistance, Resilience and Community Formation -- 5 Institutions of Wellbeing? The Affordances and Limitations of the Decolonial (Digital) Archive -- 6 A Space of Recovery: Living Heritage and a Way Forward -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Part 2 Medical Institutions -- Chapter 6 The Holloway Sanatorium 1885-1980 -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Context: Care of the Insane in England -- 3 The Sanatorium -- 4 Religious Needs and Medication in the Sanatorium -- 5 The Casebook Records -- 6 Other Experiences of the Sanatorium -- 7 The Sanatorium Closes -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Chapter 7 The Art Studio in Inpatient Psychiatric Care: A Material and Immaterial Heritage That Could Contribute to Current Practice -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methodology -- 3 From Abandoned Space to Art Studio -- 4 The Courage to Paint -- 5 A Transitional Space -- References -- Chapter 8 Addiction - Same for Everybody All the Time? Perceptions and Value Judgements of Alcohol Abuse in Different Historical and Spatial Contexts -- 1 Normal Use and Pathological Abuse - Medical and Social Norms -- 2 Who Drinks Too Much? Social and Psychiatric Problems in Synergy -- 3 The Present Chapter -- 4 The Macro-level Heritage: Considering Alcohol Regulations and Consumption Patterns -- 5 The Meso-level Heritage: Considering Factors Relating to Social Groups -- 6 The Micro-level Heritage: Considering Factors Relating to the Individual -- 7 Case Examples: Addiction within Psychiatric Praxis -- 8 The Turn of the Twenty-First Century: Alcohol Addiction Diagnosis and Theory. 9 Addiction Symptoms and Behaviours: Changes Regarding Who, When, Where and Why -- 10 Functionality: Addiction as a Deviance from Both Social and Natural Function -- 11 Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Works Cited -- Chapter 9 Institutionalized Waiting: Fragmented Temporalities and Wellbeing in the Medical Waiting Room -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Well-Being and the Heritage of the Waiting Room -- 3 Elizabeth Bishop, "In the Waiting Room" -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Part 3 Carceral Spaces -- Chapter 10 'Fit and Re-Orientation': Carceral Heritage in Contemporary Design of Special Residential Homes for Youth and Its Impact on Wellbeing -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Background -- 3 SiS-Homes -- 4 The Physical Environment -- 5 Wellbeing and Incarceration -- 6 Methodological Considerations -- 7 Critical Analysis and the Concept of 'Fit and Re-Orientation' -- 8 'Fit and Re-Orientation': An Explanatory Model -- 9 'Fit' -- 10 'Re-Orientation' -- 11 Discussion: Living Carceral Heritage in Contemporary Design of Special Youth Homes -- 12 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11 Wellbeing as a Political Issue: Bad Girls and the (Representational) Heritage of Female Incarceration -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Representing the Impact of Imprisonment on Wellbeing -- 3 Conclusion -- References -- Index.
Negotiating Institutional Heritage and Wellbeing considers ways in which institutional spaces in their materiality as well as in their cultural inscriptions impact on the wellbeing of the subjects inhabiting them and explores how heritage comes to bear on these interrelations.