It has been said that Sigmund Freud sought privacy on the Ringstrasse; that is, not in the quiet of his consulting room but on the street, place of "incident and accident." We trace the social history of psychoanalysis against, and in parallel with, the respective histories of two psychoanalytic cities: fin-de-sicle Vienna and Delirious New York. This turn in sensibility from a leisurely all-seer to a person who suffers from "reminiscences," from a flaneur to a hysteric, has been produced, not insignificantly, by shifts in urban experience. While visiting some of the sites of timeless unconscious, we also explore materialist histories and economies that render psychoanalytic enterprise tangible, ranging from the city maps and institutions they make up to the rooms in which psychoanalysis makes its scene. We discuss readings in sociology of space, history of psychoanalysis, and diagnostic manuals and personal diaries work on group projects.