ABSTRACT

Working at the crossroads of contemporary geographical and cultural theory, the book explores how social spaces function as sites which foreground D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf's critiques of the social order and longings for change. Looking at various social spaces from homes to nations to utopian space brought into the here and now the book shows the ways in which these writers criticize and deconstruct the contemporary symbolic, physical, and discursive spatial topoi of the dominant socio-spatial order and envision a more liberating and inclusive human geography. In addition, the book calls for the need to redress the tendency of some spatial theories to underestimate the political potential of literary discourse about space, instead of simply and mechanically appropriating some theoretical concepts to literary criticism. One of the central findings in the book, therefore, is that literary texts can perform subversive interventions in the production of social space through their critical interaction with dominant spatial codes.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part One|65 pages

Rewriting Private and Public Spaces

chapter |7 pages

Part One Introduction

chapter |30 pages

Chapter One

chapter |25 pages

Chapter Two

part Two|57 pages

Remolding Home and Nation

chapter |8 pages

Part Two Introduction

chapter |24 pages

Chapter Three

chapter |23 pages

Chapter Four

part Three|64 pages

Utopic Spaces Here and Now

chapter |10 pages

Part Three Introduction

chapter |22 pages

Chapter Five

chapter |30 pages

Chapter Six

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion