Title:
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Resistant spaces in Kristeva and Foucault, and their literary formation in Barnes and Lorde.
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This thesis examines, in the light of Julia Kristeva's and Michel Foucault's recent theorisations of the
productions of meaning, the work of two authors, Djuna Barnes and Audre Lorde, whose writing, it
argues, sets up virtual spaces which can become places of resistance to the normative functioning of a
given culture.
Having sketched a philosophical background to notions of extra-linguistic space through
reference to Plato, Kant, Hegel and Lacan, the first chapter considers what is distinctive in the
theories of space provided by Kristeva, who (in Revolution in Poetic Language) develops Plato's
notion of the chora functioning at times as a synonym for "semiotic articulation". The semiotic (le
semiotique) is employed by Kristeva in a very precise way. It represents a convolution of expressions:
operating as a drive system within the body that affects the structure of language (understood by her
as the symbolic), as a "network of marks" that breaches the established sign systems, and as a
revolutionary process that is responsible for the transgression and articulation of new meanings.
Because both the semiotic and the symbolic are an inseparable part of the signifying processes of
language, they together act as pathways of production. Of all these various processes and relations,
the most remarkable one is that these two modalities are genderised: the semiotic chora is "enigmatic
and feminine, th[e] space underlying the written"; while the symbolic is a "phallic function". That
being so, one of the main features of this thesis is to articulate a feminist argument in relation to
Kristeva, expounding on the notion of the spatial concept of the semiotic chora as a "resistance" to
phallocentrism.
The second chapter sets out to explore Foucault's spatial reasoning. My argument is that space is
central to Foucault's concerns. This is demonstrated in several ways. First I suggest that Foucault's
interpretation of a social construction of space is such that the subject is connected to its own
fashioning processes. Second, by introducing space into his documentation of history, Foucault sets
in motion a dispersion of society's master narratives. In respect of this, I argue that a methodology
can be formed from Foucault's spatial term "heterotopia", where contingent sites, rather than causes,
shape new discourses and open up possibilities of resistance against the techniques and tactics of
domination. Because (as Foucault writes in The Order of Things) the heterotopia serves to "desiccate
speech, stop words in their tracks, contest the very possibility of grammar at its source", it not only
produces discourse, it challenges all boundaries and remains essentially fluid, escaping the matrix of
historical category.
The next three chapters consider the implications of Kristeva's definition of the semiotic chora
which, as briefly mentioned above, is constituted by psychosomatic drives. Hence, mood plays a
central role in the semiotic chora. I construct a reading of Nightwood the main tenet of which is to
examine the textual variations of Kristeva's resistant and abject `language'. Located in melancholy,
incest, and discontentednesse ach trope forms individual chapterse xploring ways in which the limits
of language are transgressed. Taken as a whole, the theme running through the three chapters on
Nightwood is that new literary formations arise when the abject as mood becomes structured and
made meaningful by the symbolic.
The last two chapters examine Foucault's position in relation to Kristeva's, and argue that
Kristeva's and Foucault's spatial thinking questions the appearance of finality and completeness in
language. These chapters also provide a practical application of Foucault's heterotopia, in which
spaces between contingent sites are shaped by Lorde. It is argued that opportunities of resistance are
provided by Lorde who, naming her disparate position against the master narratives that fail to
recognise her, locates her difference from them.
In conclusion, a feminist reading of Kristeva's chora and Foucault's heterotopia reveals an
opening to resistant spaces and new paths of production of meaning. Chora and heterotopia, then, are
not merely abstract philosophical concepts, but powerful tools of reading, as is shown by their
application in the interpretation of the works of Barnes and Lorde.
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