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Couch



         


A couch or sofa is an item of furniture for the comfortable seating of more than one person.

Couches are usually to be found in the living room or the lounge. They come in a variety of textiles and in leather. A typical couch seats two to three people and has an armrest on either side. Many different types of couch exist however: popular types include the divan, the chaiselonge, the canapé or the ottoman. Also, to save space, some sofas double as beds.

The couch was originally an Arabian ruler?s throne and has been in existence since Antiquity. Originally it was an elitist piece of furniture and it wasn?t until industrialization that the couch became an indispensable item of furniture in middle and lower class households. Throughout its history it has often been an object of derision, considered a variety of things from decadent to conformist.

The couch is an extremely gendered object. It is invariably associated with femininity. In the visual arts women were represented sitting or lying on couches, oftentimes in the nude and/or in submissive positions, thereby satisfying masculinist erotic fantasies. The persistent use of this trope (still to be seen in modern cinema, e.g. in Titanic) has established an almost intrinsic connection between the female body and the couch.

The couch is often associated with Freudian psychoanalysis. Freud originally used the couch as a tool to aid his hypnosis of the analysand. However when he moved on from hypnosis to stream-of-consciousness discourse as his dominant mode of analysis with the development of the interpretation of dreams, he still held on to the couch. He justified this with the need to limit the transference between psychoanalyst and analysand. Thus, the couch proved particularly useful because it limits the visibility of the analyst.

Today the couch is invariably linked to both domestic family life and television culture. It is often positioned in relation to the television set in a living room. It has spawned social phenomena such as the couch potato, a person who spends his or her glued to the television set. The couch has also become the central prop for many TV sitcoms and soap operas. This symbiosis, through which the couch has shifted from the private to the public squere, has been satirically depicted in popular culture, in television series such as Married with Children, The Simpsons or Beavis and Butthead.


Couch is also a Munich-based instrumental band. Couch's keyboard is Stefanie Böhm, who plays in Ms. John Soda too.

Discography:





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