Phenomenology of the Winter-City Myth in the Rise and Decline of Built Environments /
| Κύριος συγγραφέας: | |
|---|---|
| Συγγραφή απο Οργανισμό/Αρχή: | |
| Περίληψη: | XIII, 230 p. text  | 
| Γλώσσα: | Αγγλικά | 
| Έκδοση: | 
        Cham :
          Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
    
        2016.
     | 
| Έκδοση: | 1st ed. 2016. | 
| Θέματα: | |
| Διαθέσιμο Online: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-26701-2 | 
| Μορφή: | Ηλεκτρονική πηγή Βιβλίο | 
                Πίνακας περιεχομένων: 
            
                  - 1. Introduction: Intertwining consciousness, human body and the environment
 - Part I. Winter and the North in the emergence of civic space
 - 2. Human posture and the nightly sky: Cosmos in Diluvial prehistoric myth
 - 3. The North, Axis mundi and gender myths: The primordial civic space
 - 4. Winter acumen and mood disorder: Apollo, Dionysus and Foucault’s History of Madness
 - 5. Hero under the weather: Mood disorder and the emergence of civic space
 - 6. Psychocultural aspects of weather and place: The Little Ice Age
 - Part II. Body-earth-sky and city-form
 - 7. Sky myths and gender projection in early city-form
 - 8. The North and paradigms of balance: Harmony and equilibrium as an urban ideal
 - 9. Axial Age civilizations as a project of north-hemispheric masculinity: The Antipodean myth
 - 10. Philosophical urbanism from Thomas More to Walter Benjamin
 - Part III. Phenomenology of the winter-city
 - 12. From Cartesian doubt to heroic design: The late LIA and the Myth of the Grand Designer.-13. The late LIA and its urban sequel: Reason, mental illness and the emergence of crowd
 - Part IV. Solvitur ambulando
 - 14. Aftermaths of the LIA: Loss of place and the North American winter-city
 - 15. Epilogue.