Nowhere

The Psychology of Liminal Spaces and Why They Haunt Us
120 Seiten, Taschenbuch
€ 17,60
-
+
Lieferung in 7-14 Werktagen

Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.

Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

You know the feeling. An empty school corridor. A deserted shopping mall after closing. A hotel hallway at 3am. An empty swimming pool. You have never been threatened. Nothing is wrong. And yet something is deeply, specifically, undeniably wrong.This feeling has a name now: liminal dread. And in the last five years, it has become one of the most widely shared aesthetic and psychological phenomena on the internet - generating hundreds of millions of views, entire creative communities, and a new vocabulary for an experience that everyone has had and almost nobody had previously been able to describe.But where does it come from? Why do empty human spaces generate a response so precise, so consistent, and so physically immediate? And what does the specific architecture of our dread reveal about the way the brain relates to space, place, and the presence of other people?In Nowhere, writer Rowan Ashby draws on neuroscience, evolutionary psychology, philosophy, architectural theory, and the rich cultural history of horror and the uncanny to deliver the first serious popular account of liminal dread. You will discover: - The specific brain mechanism - the predictive processing error - that makes empty human spaces feel wrong at a level below conscious thought- Why evolution wired us to experience human-built spaces without humans as a threat signal- How Freud's uncanny, the uncanny valley, and Mark Fisher's theory of the eerie all converge on the same psychological territory- Why place cells and cognitive maps make the empty school corridor personal in a way the empty forest never is- The specific liminal power of the swimming pool, the shopping mall, the airport, the parking garage, and the school- How The Shining, the Backrooms, and brutalist architecture exploit the same neural mechanisms- What liminal dread reveals about the philosophy of place, the nature of consciousness, and what it means to be somewherePrecise, atmospheric, and written with the depth of cultural criticism and the clarity of cognitive science, Nowhere is the book that finally explains why the photographs that haunt us haunt us - and what the feeling they generate says about the mind that feels it.The corridor is empty. The light is still on. And somewhere in your brain, an alarm is firing. This is the book that explains why.