Topophobia: A Phenomenology of Anxiety is a vivid second-person inquiry into how anxiety plays a formative part in the constitution of subjectivity. While anxiety has assumed a central role in the history of philosophy – and phenomenology in particular – until now there has been no sustained study of how it shapes our sense of self and being in the world. This book seeks to address that lacuna. 
Calling upon the author's own experience of being agoraphobic, it  asks a series of critical questions: How is our experience of the world  affected by our bodily experience of others? What role do moods play in  shaping our experience of the world? How can we understand the role of  conditions such as agoraphobia in relation to our normative  understanding of the body and the environment? What is the relation  between anxiety and home? The reader will gain an insight into the  strange experience of being unable to cross a bridge, get on a bus, and  enter a supermarket without tremendous anxiety. At the same time, they  will discover aspects of their own bodily experience that are common to  both agoraphobes and non-agoraphobes alike.
Integrating  phenomenological inquiry with current issues in the philosophy of mind, Trigg arrives at a renewed understanding of identity, which arranges  self, other and world as a unified whole. Written with a sense of  vividness often lacking in academic discourse, this is living philosophy.