ABSTRACT

Occupying Space in American Literature and Culture inscribes itself within the spatial turn that permeates the ways we look at literary and cultural productions. The volume seeks to clarify the connections between race, space, class, and identity as it concentrates on different occupations and disoccupations, enclosures and boundaries. Space is scaled up and down, from the body, the ground zero of spatiality, to the texturology of Manhattan; from the striated place of the office in Melville’s "Bartleby, the Scrivener" on Wall Street, to the striated spaces of internment camps and reservations; from the lowest of the low, the (human) clutter that lined the streets of Albany, NY, during the Depression, to the new Towers of Babel that punctuate the contemporary architecture of transparencies. As it strings together these spatial narratives, the volume reveals how, beyond the boundaries that characterize each space, every location has loose ends that are impossible to contain.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Spatial and Ideological Occupations

chapter 1|23 pages

Emptying Out the Premises

Static Heroes Reclaiming Space

chapter 2|28 pages

Places of Eviction and Places of Self-Exemption

The Homeless in William Kennedy's Ironweed and Don DeLillo's Cosmopolis

chapter 3|37 pages

Circling the Alien

Camp Logic in Austerlitz, Citizen 13660, and Lunar Braceros 2125–2148

chapter 4|30 pages

Between Border and Dwelling

The Divisibility of the Line in Frozen River and Welcome

chapter 5|12 pages

From Bartleby to Occupy Wall Street

The Politics of Empty Spaces