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(2013) Twenty-first century fiction, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

A voice without a name

gothic homelessness in Ali Smith's Hotel world and Trezza Azzopardi's Remember me

Emily Horton

pp. 132-146

It is not just that some humans are treated as humans, and others are dehumanized; it is rather that dehumanization becomes the condition for the production of the human to the extent that a “Western” civilization defines itself over and against a population understood as, by definition, illegitimate, if not dubiously human. … [In this sense,] the spectrally human, the deconstituted, are maintained and detained, made to live and die within that extra-human and extra-juridical sphere of life. (2004, p. 91)

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137035189_9

Full citation:

Horton, E. (2013)., A voice without a name: gothic homelessness in Ali Smith's Hotel world and Trezza Azzopardi's Remember me, in S. Adiseshiah & R. Hildyard (eds.), Twenty-first century fiction, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 132-146.

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