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Real places and impossible spaces : Foucault's heterotopia in the fiction of James Joyce, Vladimir Nabokov, and W.G. Sebald

Kelvin Knight
TLDR
The authors argue that the heterotopia was never intended as a tool for the study of real urban places, but rather pertains to fictional representations of these sites, which allow authors to open up unthinkable configurations of space.
Abstract
This thesis looks to restore Michel Foucault’s concept of the heterotopia to its literary origins, and to examine its changing status as a literary motif through the course of twentieth-century fiction. Initially described as an impossible space, representable only in language, the term has found a wider audience in its definition as a kind of real place that exists outside of all other space. Examples of these semi-mythical sites include the prison, the theatre, the garden, the library, the museum, the brothel, the ship, and the mirror. Here, however, I argue that the heterotopia was never intended as a tool for the study of real urban places, but rather pertains to fictional representations of these sites, which allow authors to open up unthinkable configurations of space. Specifically, I focus on three writers whose work contains numerous examples of these places, and who shared the circumstance of spending the majority of their lives in exile: James Joyce, Vladimir Nabokov, and W.G. Sebald. In each case, I argue that these sites figure the experience of exteriority constituted by exile, providing these authors with an alternative perspective from which to perform a particular kind of contestation. In Ulysses, I argue, they allow Joyce to interrogate the notion of a unified Irish identity by bringing into question the space that constitutes the common locus upon which the nation is founded. In Nabokov’s Ada, they help the author to create a world that transcends the discontinuities of his transnational biography, but also serve to contest this unreal world. In Sebald’s fiction, finally, we find a critique of Foucault’s concept. In relation to the Holocaust, he questions the validity of the heterotopia by bringing into doubt the equation of space and thought upon which it is established.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason.

TL;DR: Michel Foucault takes the reader on a serendipitous journey in tracing the history of madness from the 16th to the 18th centuries using original documents, which recreates the mood, the place, and the proper perspective in thehistory of madness.
Book ChapterDOI

Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

TL;DR: In the context of scholarly re-evaluations of James Joyce's relation to the literary revival in Ireland at the start of the twentieth century, the authors examines the significance of W.B. Yeats to A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
Journal Article

The Badlands of Modernity: Heterotopia and Social Ordering

Brian McGrail
- 01 Oct 1998 - 
TL;DR: In this article, Neocleous explores the period in which the working class is incorporated into the body politic in Britain, and explores how administration becomes politicised, being used by the state for the threefold purpose: the constitution of legal subjectivity, the fashioning of the market and the subsumption of struggle.
Journal Article

Foucault and the Political

Peter Benson
- 01 Mar 1998 - 
Book ChapterDOI

The Decay of Lying

References
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