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Summary & Review Excerpts from: http://culturalstudiesnow.blogspot.com/2011/06/gaston-bachelard-poetics-of-space.html

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Commentary on the thinking of Gaston Bachelard

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Page 1: READING 1C Bachelard Gaston Commentary

Summary & Review

Excerpts from:

http://culturalstudiesnow.blogspot.com/2011/06/gaston-bachelard-poetics-of-space.html

Page 2: READING 1C Bachelard Gaston Commentary

Gaston Bachelard's "The Poetics of Space" ( La Poétique de l'Espace, 1958) is a phenomenological

interrogation into the meaning of spaces which preoccupy poetry, intimate spaces such as a house, a

drawer, a night dresser and spaces of wide expansion such as vistas and woods. In the opening chapter

of The Poetics of Space Bachelard places special emphasis on the interior domestic space and its

component: the various rooms and the different types of furniture in it. Bachelard attempts to trace the

reception of the poetic image in the subjective consciousness, a reception which demands, so Bachelard

holds, great openness and a focus on the present experience while eliminate transient time.

The house is, for Bachelard, the quintessential phenomenological object, meaning that this is the place in

which the personal experience reaches its epitome. Bachelrad sees the house as a sort of initial universe,

asserting that "all really inhabited space bears the essence of the notion of home" (The Poetics of Space,

p.5). Bachelard proceeds to examine the home as the manifestation of the soul through the poetic image

and literary images which are found in poetry. He examines locations in the house as places of intimacy

and memory which are manifested in poetry.

Bachelard explains his focus on the poetic image for it being the property of the innocent consciousness,

something which precedes conscious thought, does not require knowledge and is the direct product of the

heart and soul. This direct relation of poetry to reality, for Bachelard, intensifies the reality of perceived

objects ("imagination augments the values of reality", The Poetics of Space, p.3). Poetry, Bachelrad

holds, is directed at one and the same time both inwards and outwards, thus establishing his future

discussion of inside and outside which is so familiar to anyone dealing with the theory of space.

Bachelard determines that the house has both unity and complexity, it is made out of memories and

experiences, its different parts arouse different sensations at yet it brings up a unitary, intimate

experience of living. Such experiential qualities are what Bachelard finds it the poetry and prose he

analyzes. Home objects for Bachelard are charged with mental experience. A cabinet opened is a world

revealed , drawers are places of secrets, and with every habitual action we open endless dimensions of

our existence.

In "The Poetics of Space" Bachelard introduces his concept of topoanlysis, which he defines as the

systematic psychological studying of the sites of our intimate lives. The house, the most intimate of all

spaces, "protects the daydreamer" and therefore understanding the house is for Bachelard a way to

understand the soul.

Our soul, argues Gaston Bachelard in his "Poetics of Space", in a place of dwelling. Therefore the house

is an especially suitable site for phenomenological research of the intimacy of the inner mental space. For

Page 3: READING 1C Bachelard Gaston Commentary

this end, which Bachelard terms "topoanalysis", we need to perceive it in both its diversity and unity, in its

aspects as well as in its totality of essence. The house for Bachelrad is the source of poetic images,

which bring up both its complexity and unity. This is because poetry enables us to experience the house

instead of just verbalizing it.

The house for Bachelard is not an object to examine and describe. On the contrary, one of the key

notions of Bachelard's The Poetics of Space is that one should transcend mere description in order to

grasp the essential qualities of space, the intimacy of the house, the protection and bliss that it grants us.

A phenomenological examination of the poetic representations of the house, Bachelard holds, will enable

us to experience the meaning of the home space. In the introduction to The Poetics of Space Bachelard

notes that the phenomenology of the poetic expression is the phenomenology of the soul and not the

mind, and it is aimed at a core, initial and essential strata of our experience of being. By reconstructing a

subjective consciousness which gave birth to a poetic image of homw we discover an individuality we can

connect with by means of our analysis, what Bachelard terms inter-subjectivity.

Bachelard speaks of thought, daydreaming and dreaming invoked by the house, actions which resurrect

the past and connect it with the present. When we enter a new house we are flooded with experiences of

prior homes, which are not memories but something rather different. In this state all of the homes of our

life trace back to the early house of our childhood. As Bachelard puts it "we are never real historians, but

always near poets, and our emotion is perhaps nothing but an expression of a poetry that was lost (The

Poetics of Space, p.6).

In his "The Poetics of Space" Gaston Bachelard introduces his concept of "topoanalysis" which he defines

as "the systematic psychological study of the sites of out intimate lives" (The Poetics of Space, p.8). He

then proceeds to assert that "in the theatre of the past that is constituted by memory, the stage setting

maintains the characters in their dominant roles" (ibid). What Bachelard means is that memories of the

house and its various parts are not something remembered but rather something which is entwined with

the present, a part of our ongoing current experience. Bachelard writes about the desire to stop time. The

way to transcend history, to produce that space which suspends time, is through imaging and

hallucination. Unretrievable history is fossilized, memories stand, they do not move, and therefore for

Bachelard it is space, not time, which invokes memories. Bachelrad therefore searches, through is

topoanalysis, the experience and not the process, the essence and not the contingent and fleeting.

In order to give an account of mental life a biography is insufficient for Bachelard who asks for a

topoanalysis of places, houses, in subjective terms. The topoanalysis examines the intimacy of the house

room after room, space after space. These are not actual material rooms or spaces, but rather the

Page 4: READING 1C Bachelard Gaston Commentary

dreamed, imagined, remembered and read places, which allow us to come closer to the core of mental

experience.

The psychoanalytic subconscious, Bachelard holds, is "normal" whenever it conveniently and blissfully

dwells in place. Bachelard does not elaborate in this respect but what is implied in the introduction to The

Poetics of Space is that such blissful dwelling is the sense of feeling at ease, feeling at home.

Psychoanalysis calls the subconscious into the conscious in order to help the "homeless" find their sense

of being in place. Topoanalysis, as an aid for psychoanalysis, will examine the spaces through which we

can exit the shelter of the subconscious and enter the conscious of our imagination.

With these intimate spaces being spaces of bliss, topoanalysis is related to topophilia (the love of place) -

the love for those places exposed by topoanlysis. And through the concept of topophila Bachelard

examines those spaces of intimacy he most esteems – the rooms of the house.

Poetry's capacity, Bachelard holds, to summon the subconscious is not dependant on its ability to

describe space, but rather to direct or set a bearing towards it. Only an implied description will enable us

to bring forth those sought after feelings which might vanish if intellectualized.

To his notions of topoanalysis and topophilia introduced in The Poetics of Space Bachelard adds the

physical dimension, arguing that our house is engraved into our flesh. The body it better in preserving

detailed memories than the mind is. Other memories are harder to trace and these can be revealed only

by means of the poetic image. For Bachelard, poetry's main function is to give us back a state of

daydreaming, which is something history, psychology and geography are incapable of.

The house, says Gaston Bachelard in "The Poetics of Space", is a body of images which gives the illusion

of stability. He offers a vertical image of the house which is created by the polarity of the attic and

basement which denote, for Bachelard, irrationality and rationality respectively. The reason for going up

to the attic is rather obvious for the attic not only shelters us from the weather but it also makes apparent

the whole structure of the house. The attic, in Bachelard's The Poetics of Space, is a metaphor for clarity

of mind. The basement, on the contrary, is the darker, subterranean and irrational entity of the house.

Both this sites appear in our dreams and produce varying kinds of them.

Bachelard relies on Jung to account for his psychoanalytic metaphor in which when a person hears

suspicious sounds coming from the basement he rushes to the attic to see what they are, fearing to go

down to the basement.

Page 5: READING 1C Bachelard Gaston Commentary

One of the problems with this metaphor introduced in The Poetics of Space is that urban homes do not

have an attic nor basement, contrary to the countryside homes which Bachelard obviously has in mind.

Therefore Bachelard concludes that urban homes lack the vertical quality of intimacy. The urban boxes,

as Bachelard puts it, have neither roots nor a space around them. Their relations with space have

become artificial. the only way urban residential apartments can offer the experience elaborated upon by

Bachelard in The Poetics of Space in by employing our imagination, and here Bachelard describes his

own personal experience in a Paris apartment in which he had to mentally imagine his room and the city

as nature, turning the sofa into a boat rocking on the waves, and the city into an ocean.