This book investigates how immersive environments across architecture art and media shape spatial perception cultural identity and the construction of reality. It offers a spatial-psychoanalytical reading of virtual reality (VR) examining how architecture and representation engage with the body sensorial experience and subjectivity. Redefining VR as an experiential and spatial condition rather than simply a digital construct the book traces its lineage from ancient fresco rooms to contemporary digital landscapes. Grounded in theoretical frameworks from psychoanalysis phenomenology and media theory it explores how immersive environments function as extensions of the body and reflect a collective identity. Case studies from Pompeii to the Metaverse illustrate how architecture and representation shape our virtual experience. Rather than viewing VR as a new phenomenon the book positions it as part of a longer trajectory in design and representation shaped by evolving tools and technologies. It argues that the virtual spaces we create and the artifacts we choose to represent encode insights about identity memory and social conditions. This book is written for theorists practitioners academics and students of architecture art and design. It situates architectural practice within the unfolding discourse on virtuality identity and the cultural implications of space-making. |Virtual Reality Architecture Culture and the Body