Abstract

This paper reconstructs a fragment of psychiatric-psychoanalytical geography, interfacing it with the ‘new walking studies’, centring on a walk conducted in 1935 by a man experiencing mental health problems in Glasgow, Scotland. This man, a patient of the psychiatrist Thomas Ferguson Rodger, had mobility problems that rendered walking difficult – prone to stumbling, staggering, wavering – but with the likelihood of these problems being psychosomatic in origin. Through analytic sessions enacting a kind of ‘make-do’ psychoanalysis, the patient reflected on his mobility problems, as when relating his own walking ‘experiment’. Explanations advanced for his difficulties mixed psychoanalytic tropes with a gathering self-awareness of how fraught childhood experiences, had created the frame for an adult existence continually shying away from wider encounters and challenges beyond the domestic sphere. Central here was forward momentum being lost, whether walking or advancing through a life-course, with material and metaphoric senses of being stalled or stuck – spatially, environmentally – constantly entraining one another. This case study is deployed to illustrate claims about the ‘worlding’ of psychoanalysis, and to offer provocations for how such a psychiatric-psychoanalytic geography fragment might be illuminated by work on the cultural geographies of walking.

Highlights

  • On 21st January 1935, a man went for a walk in the West End of Glasgow

  • Rodger was deeply concerned with psychiatry in its socio-environmental contexts,[4] a concern intensified by his war-time experiences and manifested in a post-war advocacy of community-based psychiatry beyond ‘the asylum’

  • McGeachan explores numerous of Laing’s cases,[17] and it is in the spirit of her inquiries that we address below our empirical ‘fragment’ of psychoanalysis-meeting-psychiatry-meeting-geography, while – echoing McGeachan – contributing to literature on the historical geographies of the ‘psy’-disciplines.[18]

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Summary

Introduction

On 21st January 1935, a man went for a walk in the West End of Glasgow. An unremarkable walk, if completed awkwardly, it acquired significance for the man as a ‘patient’ striving to understand his difficulties through analytical sessions with the Glasgow psychiatrist Thomas Ferguson Rodger (1907–1978).[2].

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