The Urban Brain: Mental Health in the Vital City

  • 7h 6m
  • Des Fitzgerald, Nikolas Rose
  • Princeton University Press
  • 2022

Most of the world’s people now live in cities and millions have moved from the countryside to the rapidly growing megacities of the global south. How does the urban experience shape the mental lives of those living in and moving to cities today? Sociologists study cities as centers of personal progress and social innovation, but also exclusion, racism, and inequality. Psychiatrists try to explain the high rates of mental disorders among urban dwellers, especially migrants. But the split between the social and life sciences has hindered understanding of how urban experience is written into the bodies and brains of urbanites. In The Urban Brain, Nikolas Rose and Des Fitzgerald seek to revive the collaboration between sociology and psychiatry about these critical questions. Reexamining the relationship between the city and the brain, Rose and Fitzgerald explore the ways cities shape the mental health and illness of those who inhabit them.

Drawing on the social and life sciences, The Urban Brain takes an ecosocial approach to the vital city, in which humans live and thrive but too often get sick and suffer. The result demonstrates what we can gain by a vitalist approach to the mental lives of those migrating to and living in cities, focusing on the ways that humans make, remake, and inhabit their urban lifeworlds.

About the Author

Nikolas Rose is Distinguished Honorary Professor in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University, and an Honorary Professor in the Institute of Advanced Studies at University College, London. His books include (with Joelle M. Abi-Rached) Neuro (Princeton). Twitter @rose_nikolas Des Fitzgerald is associate professor of sociology at the University of Exeter. His books include Tracing Autism. Twitter @Des_Fitzgerald

In this Book

  • Introduction
  • Modern Cities, Migrant Cities
  • Migration, the Metropolis, and Mental Disorder
  • The Metropolis and Mental Life Today—Shanghai 2018
  • Everyone Knows What Stress is and No One Knows What Stress is
  • The Urban Brain
  • Another Urban Biopolitics is Possible
  • Conclusion—Toward a Sociology of Inhabitation
  • Notes
  • Bibliography