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This article appeared in Harvard Design Magazine, Fall 1998, Number 6.

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© 2001 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and The MIT Press. Not to be reproduced without
the permission of the publisher

Reviewed by Joan Ockman well as an alternative to the schemati-


cism of the other emerging intellectual
The Poetics of tendency of the day, structuralism. In his
Space book Existence, Space and Architecture
(1971), Christian Norberg-Schulz, the
by Gaston Bachelard most prolific and long-term proponent
Translated from the French by Maria Jolas of a phenomenological architecture, as-
Foreword by Etienne Gilson serted that “further research on architec-
New York: Orion Press, 1964 tural space is dependent upon a better
New foreword by John R. Stilgoe understanding of existential space,” cit-
Boston: Beacon Press, 1994 ing Bachelard’s Poetics of Space together
with Otto Friedrich Bollnow’s Mensch
But any doctrine of the imaginary is nec- und Raum (1963), the chapter on space in

Book
essarily a philosophy of excess.1 Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s The Phenome-
nology of Perception (1962; original
T H R E E O R F O U R D E C A D E S ago a French, 1945), and two key works by
book entitled The Poetics of Space could Martin Heidegger, Being and Time (1962;
hardly fail to stir the architectural imagi- German, 1927) and the essay “Building
nation. First published in French in 1957 Dwelling Thinking” (1971; German,
and translated into English in 1964, 1954), as fundamental texts.3
Gaston Bachelard’s philosophical medi- Yet if Bachelard’s phenomenological

Reviews
tation on oneiric space appeared at a
moment when phenomenology and the
pursuit of symbolic and archetypal
meanings in architecture seemed to open
fertile ground within the desiccated cul-
ture of late modernism. “We are far re-
moved from any reference to simple
geometrical forms,” Bachelard wrote in a
orientation was already evident before
the Second World War, the philosophy
of science—the subject of his initial for-
mation—remained a central preoccupa-
tion throughout his career. To read only
The Poetics of Space is therefore to miss
his originality with respect to the philo-
sophical tradition from which he
chapter entitled “House and Universe.” emerged, as well as the historical speci-
“A house that has been experienced is ficity of his development. One must con-
not an inert box. Inhabited space tran- sider his work on the creative
scends geometrical space.”2 In lyrical imagination together with his writings
chapters on the “topography of our inti- on science and rationality to appreciate
mate being”—of nests, drawers, shells, the dialectic that informs his thought.
corners, miniatures, forests, and above Indeed, in a rereading of Bachelard to-
all the house, with its vertical polarity of day, it is the interrelationship between
cellar and attic—he undertook a system- science and poetry, experiment and ex-
atic study, or “topoanalysis,” of the perience, that seems to have the most
“space we love.” Although Bachelard was radical potential, while his well-known
specifically concerned with the psycho- vision of the oneiric house, with its
dynamics of the literary image, architects rather nostalgic and essentialist world
saw in his excavation of the spatial imag- view, comes across as historically dated.
inary a counter to both technoscientific In his own time, Bachelard
positivism and abstract formalism, as (1884–1962) was a remarkable intellec-

H A RVA R D D E S I G N M A G A Z I N E 1
Book Reviews The Poetics of Space

tual figure, reputedly a reader of six to “question everything,” “to escape sorbed—in the process of arriving at
books a day, and author of twenty-three from the rigidity of mental habits more rational levels of knowledge.
at the time of his death, not counting his formed by contact with familiar experi- Countering the codification of universal
scores of essays, prefaces, and posthu- ences”4—he initiated a series of investi- systems of thought and the formation of
mous fragments. At the Sorbonne, gations into the psychic meanings of the collective mentalities, as Foucault would
where he occupied the chair of history four cosmic elements, conceived as con- put it, were events and thresholds that
and philosophy of science from 1940 to stituting the repertory of poetic reverie, suspended the linear advancement of
1955, he was a beloved pedagogue the “material imagination.” The project knowledge, forcing thought into discon-
whose flowing beard, earthy accents, and of discerning a loi des quatre éléments tinuous rhythms and transforming or
elevated flights of thought made him would preoccupy him until his death, re- displacing concepts along novel avenues
something of a guru. Born into a family sulting in a suite of remarkable volumes of inquiry.8 For Bachelard as for Fou-
of modest shopkeepers and shoemakers on fire, earth, air, and water.5 In Lautréa- cault, such epistemological obstacles
in a provincial town in the idyllic coun- mont, another excursion into the domain played a crucial and creative function in
tryside of Champagne about 200 miles of depth psychology—more Jungian the history of thought. Scientific inquiry
southeast of Paris, he initially intended than Freudian, as noted by Deleuze and therefore had to remain nonteleological
to pursue a career in engineering. After Guattari, admirers of the book6— and open to the possibility of such re-
three years in the trenches of the First Bachelard set out to study the phenome- orderings and reversals. In this way,
World War, however, he changed his nology of aggression in the wild, modern rationalism would be a tran-
sights to philosophy, eventually moving “animalizing” imagery of the 19th-cen- scendent rationalism, “surrationalism.”
to Paris, where he obtained a doctorate tury Uruguayan poet Isidore Ducasse, “If one doesn’t put one’s reason at stake

© 2001 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and The MIT Press. Not to be reproduced without the permission of the publisher
from the Sorbonne in 1927 with two dis- author of Les Chants de Maldoror, one of in an experiment,” writes Bachelard in
sertations, one on the acquisition of sci- the sacred texts of the surrealists (and “Le Surrationalisme” (1936), “the exper-
entific knowledge by approximation and later of the Cobra group, on whom iment is not worth attempting.”9
the other on the thermodynamics of Bachelard was to be deeply influential). For Bachelard, the role played by the
solids. Over the next decade he pro- As Bachelard acknowledged in The epistemological obstacle in experimental
duced eight more volumes dealing with Psychoanalysis of Fire, “The axes of poetry science is exactly paralleled by that of
the epistemology of knowledge in vari- and of science are opposed to one anoth- the poetic image in literary language. In
ous sciences, becoming increasingly pre- er from the outset. All that philosophy Bachelard’s view, the authentically poetic
occupied with the dangers of a priori can hope to accomplish is to make poet- image emerges from a form of forgetting
thinking and questions of objectivity and ry and science complementary, to unite or not-knowing that “is not ignorance
experimental evidence. In L’Expérience de them as two well-defined opposites.”7 but a difficult transcendence of knowl-
l’espace dans la physique contemporaine Yet what profoundly links Bachelard’s edge.” As such, it “constantly surpasses
(1937), confronting the philosophical philosophy of knowledge to his poetics its origins.” Hence, neither history nor
implications of Einstein’s monumental of the imagination, his scientific episte- psychology can ever fully determine or
breakthrough in physics and Heisen- mology to his study of psychic phenom- explain it. As he puts it in The Poetics of
berg’s uncertainty principle, Bachelard ena, is his concern with how creative Space—underscoring the irony in the ti-
took up the contradictions between thought comes into being. Like Michel tle of his earlier book on fire—the prob-
Descartes’s and Newton’s concepts of Foucault after him (and anticipating lem with psychoanalysis (just as with
physical space as empirical, locational, Thomas Kuhn’s notion of the paradigm Marxist interpretations of history) is that
and stable, and the abstract, counterex- shift), Bachelard directed epistemologi- it seeks to explain the flower by the fer-
periential constructs of space-time being cal inquiry away from the continuities tilizer.10 For Bachelard, the poetic image
theorized by 20th-century microphysics. within systems of knowledge toward the “has no past; it is not under the sway of
But Bachelard’s inquiry into the revo- obstacles and events that interrupt the some inner drive, nor is it a measure of
lutionary character of the new scientific continuum, thereby forcing new ideas to the pressures the poet sustains in the
mind little prepared his colleagues for appear and altering the course of course of his early life. . . . The trait
the unconventional turn his work was to thought. Bachelard’s concept of the epis- proper to the image is suddenness and
take at the end of the 1930s. Influenced temological obstacle—a concept Fou- brevity: it springs up in language like the
by psychoanalysis and surrealism, two cault would assimilate in The Archaeology sudden springing forth of language it-
books, The Psychoanalysis of Fire (1938) of Knowledge—was an attempt to demon- self.”11 Bachelard’s notion of the role
and Lautréamont (1939), signaled a shift strate how knowledge incorporates its played by chance and mutability in the
in his focus from physical science to the own history of errors and divagations. emergence of the poetic image is virtual-
phenomena of consciousness, from “the The “epistemological profile” of any sci- ly identical to the creative principle of
axis of objectivization” to “that of sub- entific idea included the multiple obsta- the surrealists. For Bachelard, surrealism
jectivity.” With The Psychoanalysis of cles that had to be negated or is related to realism as surrationalism is
Fire—a book in which Bachelard set out transcended dialectically—and thus ab- to rationalism.

2 H A RVA R D D E S I G N M A G A Z I N E FA L L 1 9 9 8
Book Reviews The Poetics of Space

Explicit in his ontology of the poetic modernity. His antipathy to 20th-centu- space, Foucault prefers to confront the
image, as in surrealist literature and art, ry urbanism and technology receives its “coefficient of adversity” in the phenom-
is a critique of the ocular privilege ac- strongest expression in The Poetics of enology of human habitation, addressing
corded by Enlightenment philosophy to Space: questions of historicity and power in re-
geometry and visual evidence. Despite lation to spatial discourse and institu-
its perceptual sophistication, the eye In Paris there are no houses, and the in- tions. The Poetics of Space thus leads, at
cannot necessarily go beyond a descrip- habitants of the big city live in superim- least by one route, to Foucault’s seminal
tion of surface: “Sight says too many posed boxes. . . . They have no roots and, essay of 1967 on heterotopia, in which
things at the same time. Being does not what is quite unthinkable for a dweller of Foucault suggestively proposes to shift
see itself. Perhaps it listens to itself.”12 houses, skyscrapers have no cellars. From the problematic of Bachelardian topo-
Space, for Bachelard, is not primarily a the street to the roof, the rooms pile up analysis from intimate space to “other
container of three-dimensional objects. one on top of the other, while the tent of spaces”—spaces of crisis, deviance, ex-
For this reason the phenomenology of a horizonless sky encloses the entire city. clusion, and illusion; in other words, to
dwelling has little to do with an analysis But the height of city buildings is a pure- heterotopoanalysis.19
of “architecture” or design as such: “it is ly exterior one. Elevators do away with
not a question of describing houses, or the heroism of stair climbing so that Notes
enumerating their picturesque features there is no longer any virtue in living up 1. Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space, trans.
and analyzing for which reasons they are near the sky. Home has become mere hor- Maria Jolas (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), 210.
comfortable.”13 Rather, space is the izontality. The different rooms that com- 2. Ibid., 47.
abode of human consciousness, and the pose living quarters jammed into one 3. Christian Norberg-Schulz, Existence, Space and

© 2001 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and The MIT Press. Not to be reproduced without the permission of the publisher
problem for the phenomenologist is to floor all lack one of the fundamental Architecture (New York: Praeger, 1972), 15–16.
study how it accommodates conscious- principles for distinguishing and classify- 4. Gaston Bachelard, The Psychoanalysis of Fire,
ness—or the half-dreaming conscious- ing the values of intimacy. trans. Alan C. M. Ross (Boston: Beacon Press,
ness Bachelard calls reverie. In this But in addition to the intimate nature 1964), 1, 6.
sense, any “application” of Bachelard’s of verticality, a house in a big city lacks 5. Following La Psychanalyse du feu, Bachelard’s
ideas to architecture requires a cautious cosmicity. For here, where houses are no books on the cosmic imagination are L’Eau et les
approach at best. Indeed, Bachelard longer set in natural surroundings, the rêves. Essai sur l’imagination de la matière (1942;
would undoubtedly argue that almost relationship between house and space be- English trans., Water and Dreams: An Essay on the
everything we know about architecture comes an artificial one. Everything about Imagination of Matter, 1983); L’Air et les songes: Es-
as a historical discipline stands in the it is mechanical and, on every side, inti- sai sur l’imagination du mouvement (1943; trans.,
way of everything we can know about mate living flees.15 Air and Dreams: An Essay on the Imagination of
the poetics of dwelling. Movement, 1988); La Terre et les rêveries de la volon-
But precisely from the standpoint of Bachelard’s evocation of the rustic té (1948); La Terre et les rêveries du repos (1948); La
clinging to traditional modes of thought, abode in Champagne is almost exactly Flamme d’une chandelle (1961; trans., The Flame of
Bachelard’s vision of the oneiric house— contemporary with Heidegger’s paean to a Candle, 1988); and Fragments d’une poétique du
influential as it has been on a certain sec- the peasant hut in the Black Forest.16 feu (posthumous, 1988). The Poetics of Space is
tor of architectural discourse since the Henri Lefebvre, who admired both properly part of this series, the house belonging
’60s—itself seems to constitute a blind philosophers, was among the first to to the earthly element of the cosmos. Two more
spot or epistemological obstacle. His point out the shared aura of nostalgia related works—La Poétique de la rêverie (1960;
radical will to question all received ideas that suffuses their poetics of dwelling. trans., The Poetics of Reverie: Childhood, Language,
and experience, his concept of the dy- The “special, still sacred, quasi-religious and the Cosmos, 1969) and Le Droit de rêver
namism of the creative imagination, and and in fact almost absolute space” that (posthumous, 1970; trans., The Right to Dream,
his post-Newtonian philosophy of sci- both Bachelard and Heidegger associate 1971)—complete the list of Bachelard’s books on
ence contradict a conception of dwelling with the idea of house reflects “the terri- the phenomenology of the imagination.
rooted in the soil of the preindustrial ble urban reality that the twentieth cen- 6. Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, A Thousand
French countryside. It is no coincidence tury has instituted.”17 The reverie of a Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, trans. Brian
that Bachelard first evokes this atavistic maternal, womblike, and stable home, Massumi (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
dream world—“a house that comes forth sheltering and remote, is, as Anthony Press, 1987), 235–236.
from the earth, that lives rooted in its Vidler has suggested more recently,18 a 7. The Psychoanalysis of Fire, 2.
black earth”—in his book La Terre et les symptomatic response to the experience 8. Michel Foucault, The Archaeology of Knowledge
rêveries du repos, published in 1948, just of an unheimlich modernity. and the Discourse on Language, trans. A. M. Sheri-
after the Second World War.14 From this perspective, the work of dan Smith (New York: Pantheon, 1972), 4.
Bachelard’s recourse to the poetics of Foucault begins—consciously—where 9. Cit. in Denis Hollier, ed., The College of Sociolo-
“felicitous space” would seem to be a Bachelard leaves off. Instead of gy, 1937–39, trans. Betsy Wing (Minneapolis:
way of countering an encroaching Bachelard’s timeless reverie of felicitous University of Minnesota Press, 1988), 397, n.2.

3 H A RVA R D D E S I G N M A G A Z I N E FA L L 1 9 9 8
Book Reviews The Poetics of Space

10. The Poetics of Space, xxvi, xxviii–xxix.


11. Maurice Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation,
trans. Susan Hanson (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, 1993), 320–321.
12. The Poetics of Space, 215. Cit. in Martin Jay,
Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twenti-
eth-Century French Thought (Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1994), 388, n.29.
13. The Poetics of Space, 4.
14. Gaston Bachelard, “The Oneiric House,”
trans. Joan Ockman, in Joan Ockman with Ed-
ward Eigen, ed., Architecture Culture 1943–1968:
A Documentary Anthology (New York: Rizzoli,
1993), 111.
15. The Poetics of Space, 26–27. Bachelard’s italics.
16. See Martin Heidegger, “Building Dwelling
Thinking,” in Poetry, Language, Thought, trans.
Albert Hofstadter (New York: Harper & Row,
1975), 160.
17. Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, trans.

© 2001 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and The MIT Press. Not to be reproduced without the permission of the publisher
Donald Nicholson-Smith (Oxford: Basil Black-
well, 1991), 120–121.
18. Anthony Vidler, The Architectural Uncanny:
Essays on the Modern Unhomely (Cambridge: MIT
Press, 1992), 63–66. For a feminist reading along
similar lines, suggesting that the dream of
dwelling “in the bosom of the house” is a male
fantasy not shared by most women (for whom the
house is more a place of labor than repose), see
Sharon Haar and Christopher Reed, “Coming
Home: A Postscript on Postmodernism,” in
Christopher Reed, ed., Not at Home: The Suppres-
sion of Domesticity in Modern Art and Architecture
(London: Thames and Hudson, 1996), 257–258.
19. The “coefficient of adversity” is Bachelard’s
term; see Water and Dreams, p. 157. Foucault’s es-
say, “Of Other Spaces: Utopias and Hetero-
topias,” is republished in Architecture Culture,
1943-1968, 419-426. As this article was going to
press, I came across Edward S. Casey’s illuminat-
ing philosophical history, The Fate of Place (Uni-
versity of California Press, 1997), which situates
Bachelard’s Poetics of Space in the broad context of
Western philosophical discourse on the concept
of place.

Joan Ockman teaches history and theory at


the Columbia University Graduate School of
Architecture, Planning and Preservation.

4 H A RVA R D D E S I G N M A G A Z I N E FA L L 1 9 9 8

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