1st Edition

The Spaces of the Hospital Spatiality and Urban Change in London 1680-1820

By Dana Arnold Copyright 2013
176 Pages 52 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

176 Pages 52 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

176 Pages 52 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Spaces of the Hospital examines how hospitals operated as a complex category of social, urban and architectural space in London from 1680 to 1820. This period witnessed the transformation of the city into a modern metropolis. The hospital was very much part of this process and its spaces, both interior and exterior, help us to understand these changes in terms of spatiality and spatial... Read more

Introduction  1. The Spaces of the Hospital  2. Heterotopias  3. There is no Place like Home  4. Matter out of Place  5. The Gift: Dare Quam Accipere  6. The Complete Urbanisation of Society  Bibliography  Index

Biography

Dana Arnold is Professor of Architectural History and Theory at Middlesex University, London. Her other writings on London include Rural Urbanism: London landscapes in the early nineteenth century (2006) and Representing the Metropolis: Architecture, urban experience and social life in London 1800-1840 (2000).

"[T]he book is an excellent and easy read, full of fresh insights about a hugely significant and understudied building type." - Annmarie Adams, Journal of Architectural Education, McGill University

"By devoting each chapter to a different aspect of the hospital, Arnold highlights an unusually wide range of responses to it, encompassing patrons, inmates, visitors, and property owners. Through a variety of interpretive keys and sources — from the metaphorical notion of dirt to Mauss’s theories about gift-giving, from archival documents to William Hogarth’s paintings — she showcases creative modes of analysis that stretch beyond the usual questions and disciplinary boundaries of architectural history." - Kimberley Skelton, Architectural Histories