Lecture Roger Luckhurst: A History of the Hospital Corridor: Madness and Civilisation
KU Leuven organises Health Humanities lecture series
KU Leuven Health Humanities Lecture Series 2024-2025: Health and the Built Environment
‘We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us’, or so Winston Churchill once said. For better or for worse, our constructed physical space – the so-called built environment – impacts on our behaviours, our social interactions, and our physical and mental health. The speakers of this year’s LCH² lecture series discuss various examples of the relationship between architectural space and human well-being, from across a range of health humanities, including architecture, literary and colonial history, sociology, and disability studies. In doing so, they will touch on themes as varied as the role of the corridor in hospital architecture, the connections between buildings and disabled bodies in science fiction movies, and the architectural evolution of retirement homes. Join online or on campus, at KU Leuven, for a series of inspiring health humanities talks about the built environment.
Programme
- 13 February 2025 – Pleuntje Jellema: The Roles of Cancer Care Facilities in Users’ Well-being: Foregrounding the Built Environment and Learning Lessons for Design
- 27 February 2025 – Roger Luckhurst: A History of the Hospital Corridor: Madness and Civilisation
- 27 March 2025 – Simon De Nys-Ketels: “At least the Belgians built hospitals!”: Myths and Realities of the Belgian ‘Medical Model Colony’
- 24 April 2025 – Alyson Patsavas: Sites of Intervention: Disability and the (Built) Environment in Imagined Futures
- 8 May 2025 – Cleo Valentine: Architectural Neuroimmunology: Examining the Impact of Architectural Form on Neurophysiological Activity
- 22 May 2025 – Karin Bijsterveld: The ‘Return’ of the Retirement Home: Anthropology, Architecture and Policy Analysis in the Historiography of Postwar Housing for Older People in the Netherlands
A History of the Hospital Corridor: Madness and Civilisation
The great reformist drive of the liberal state in the nineteenth century embodied hopes in a new kind of institutional architecture, built around the novel device of the corridor. In prisons and workhouses, but particularly in hospitals and asylums, the movement that the corridor allowed embodied rationality, order, rehabilitation and hygiene. But by the 1960s, some began to suspect that these spaces produced the opposite effects: disorientation, disorder, even an annihilation of the self. The ‘monster’ asylums began to be abandoned, and hospitals became profoundly anti-corridic. The true horror now is to be left abandoned as a patient in a hospital corridor. This talk will track this rise and fall of a model of embodied space.
For more information about the programme or how to register, visit this website.
