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Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias

Marie-luise Kohlke Orcid Logo, Elizabeth Ho, Akira Suwa

Humanities, Volume: 11, Issue: 1, Pages: 8 - 10

Swansea University Author: Marie-luise Kohlke Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.3390/h11010008

Abstract

The introduction to this special issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias investigates the affinitiesbetween the spaces designated by Michel Foucault’s ambivalent and protean concept of ‘heterotopia’and the similarly equivocal, shifting, and adaptable cultural phenomenon of ‘neo-Victorianism’.In both cas...

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Published in: Humanities
ISSN: 2076-0787
Published: MDPI AG 2022
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa59173
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first_indexed 2022-01-13T12:08:52Z
last_indexed 2022-01-19T04:29:02Z
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spelling 2022-01-18T11:23:49.5945326 v2 59173 2022-01-13 Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias 789e6b628cdc4d0fc1c66eff6654c610 0000-0003-1475-7218 Marie-luise Kohlke Marie-luise Kohlke true false 2022-01-13 AELC The introduction to this special issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias investigates the affinitiesbetween the spaces designated by Michel Foucault’s ambivalent and protean concept of ‘heterotopia’and the similarly equivocal, shifting, and adaptable cultural phenomenon of ‘neo-Victorianism’.In both cases, cultural spaces and/or artefacts prove deeply intertwined with chronicity, at oncejuxtaposing and blending different temporal moments, past and present. Socially produced sitesof distinct emplacement are exposed not just as culturally and historically contingent constructs,but simultaneously enable forms of resistance to the prevailing ideologies that call them into being.The fertile exercise of considering heterotopias and neo-Victorianism in conjunction opens up newexplorations of the Long Nineteenth Century and its impact on today’s cultural imaginary, memoryand identity politics, contestations of systemic historical iniquities, and engagements with forms ofdifference, non-normativity, and Otherness. Journal Article Humanities 11 1 8 10 MDPI AG 2076-0787 compensation; crisis; cultural memory; deviation; Michel Foucault; heterotopia; identitypolitics; illusion; neo-Victorianism; Otherness 13 1 2022 2022-01-13 10.3390/h11010008 COLLEGE NANME English Literature COLLEGE CODE AELC Swansea University Not Required N/A 2022-01-18T11:23:49.5945326 2022-01-13T12:00:31.1339387 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - English Literature, Creative Writing Marie-luise Kohlke 0000-0003-1475-7218 1 Elizabeth Ho 2 Akira Suwa 3 59173__22166__e8fe974c73f94424ad82f7f0f63050ad.pdf 59173.pdf 2022-01-18T11:22:39.1925363 Output 245938 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2022 by the authors.This is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias
spellingShingle Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias
Marie-luise Kohlke
title_short Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias
title_full Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias
title_fullStr Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias
title_full_unstemmed Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias
title_sort Heterotopic and Neo-Victorian Affinities: Introducing the Special Issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias
author_id_str_mv 789e6b628cdc4d0fc1c66eff6654c610
author_id_fullname_str_mv 789e6b628cdc4d0fc1c66eff6654c610_***_Marie-luise Kohlke
author Marie-luise Kohlke
author2 Marie-luise Kohlke
Elizabeth Ho
Akira Suwa
format Journal article
container_title Humanities
container_volume 11
container_issue 1
container_start_page 8
publishDate 2022
institution Swansea University
issn 2076-0787
doi_str_mv 10.3390/h11010008
publisher MDPI AG
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - English Literature, Creative Writing{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - English Literature, Creative Writing
document_store_str 1
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description The introduction to this special issue on Neo-Victorian Heterotopias investigates the affinitiesbetween the spaces designated by Michel Foucault’s ambivalent and protean concept of ‘heterotopia’and the similarly equivocal, shifting, and adaptable cultural phenomenon of ‘neo-Victorianism’.In both cases, cultural spaces and/or artefacts prove deeply intertwined with chronicity, at oncejuxtaposing and blending different temporal moments, past and present. Socially produced sitesof distinct emplacement are exposed not just as culturally and historically contingent constructs,but simultaneously enable forms of resistance to the prevailing ideologies that call them into being.The fertile exercise of considering heterotopias and neo-Victorianism in conjunction opens up newexplorations of the Long Nineteenth Century and its impact on today’s cultural imaginary, memoryand identity politics, contestations of systemic historical iniquities, and engagements with forms ofdifference, non-normativity, and Otherness.
published_date 2022-01-13T04:16:16Z
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