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The Architecture of Good Behavior: Psychology and Modern Institutional Design in Postwar America (Culture Politics & the Built Environment)

The Architecture of Good Behavior: Psychology and Modern Institutional Design in Postwar America (Culture Politics & the Built Environment)

Current price: $55.00
Publication Date: April 7th, 2020
Publisher:
University of Pittsburgh Press
ISBN:
9780822945734
Pages:
264

Description

Inspired by the rise of environmental psychology and increasing support for behavioral research after the Second World War, new initiatives at the federal, state, and local levels looked to influence the human psyche through form, or elicit desired behaviors with environmental incentives, implementing what Joy Knoblauch calls “psychological functionalism.” Recruited by federal construction and research programs for institutional reform and expansion—which included hospitals, mental health centers, prisons, and public housing—architects theorized new ways to control behavior and make it more functional by exercising soft power, or power through persuasion, with their designs.

In the 1960s –1970s era of anti-institutional sentiment, they hoped to offer an enlightened, palatable, more humane solution to larger social problems related to health, mental health, justice, and security of the population by applying psychological expertise to institutional design. In turn, Knoblauch argues, architects gained new roles as researchers, organizers, and writers while theories of confinement, territory, and surveillance proliferated. The Architecture of Good Behavior explores psychological functionalism as a political tool and the architectural projects funded by a postwar nation in its efforts to govern, exert control over, and ultimately pacify its patients, prisoners, and residents.

About the Author

Joy Knoblauch is assistant professor of architecture at the University of Michigan in the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning.
 

Praise for The Architecture of Good Behavior: Psychology and Modern Institutional Design in Postwar America (Culture Politics & the Built Environment)

“Joy Knoblauch connects psyche and form to examine a growing tendency to govern behavior through the environment. The result is an original contribution to the history of institutional architecture in postwar America with significant implications for our understanding of the power of architecture in an expanded field of government and expertise.”—Kenny Cupers, University of Basel
 

“Joy Knoblauch's detailed and carefully reasoned book on post–World War II federal construction programs takes a penetrating and critically important look at the relationship between design and psychology. At stake is not just the history of community hospitals, prisons, and housing projects, but the changing attitudes to expertise in the new world of psycho-bureaucracy.” —Mark Jarzombek, author of The Psychologizing of Modernity: Art, Architecture, and History
 

“Important for those whose work focuses on trajectories of care and the interaction of the built environment and human well-being, as well as for scholars of environmental behaviorism and evidence-based designers and researchers from all disciplines who operate at the boundaries between human health and design. . . . All readers will benefit from the way this history illuminates ingrained racism and assumptions about governability that persist within architecture today.” —Journal of Architectural Education
 

“An interesting preface to the age of neuroscience in architecture. . . . Knoblauch has ably explained its start.” —American Conservative