The Middle Place: Mediation and Heterotopia in Nick Joaquín’s The Woman Who Had Two Navels

Iping Liang*

*此作品的通信作者

研究成果: 書貢獻/報告類型篇章

摘要

Iping Liang adopts the historical trope of the “middleman” in order to explore how the ethnic Chinese migrant merchants had historically straddled the divide between the Spanish conquistadors and the local indigenous peoples in the Philippines and investigates the spatial intermediation of the “middle place” in Nick Joaquín’s seminal novel, The Woman Who Had Two Navels (1961). By drawing on the work of Michel Foucault, Edward Soja, Robert Tally, among others, this chapter examines the literary cartography of the “middle place” in the novel. First, it focuses on the ethic enclave of Binondo, Manila Chinatown, which mediates between the native city of Manila and the colonial regime of the US after the war. Second, it applies Edward Said’s thoughts on postcolonial exile to the exilic setting in Hong Kong and investigates how the island space, as a site of Foucauldian heterogenic intermediation, is also a “middle place” that provides Filipino expatriates with a sense of postcolonial exilic agency.

原文英語
主出版物標題Geocriticism and Spatial Literary Studies
發行者Palgrave Macmillan
頁面241-256
頁數16
DOIs
出版狀態已發佈 - 2022

出版系列

名字Geocriticism and Spatial Literary Studies
ISSN(列印)2578-9694
ISSN(電子)2634-5188

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • 文學與文學理論
  • 地理、規劃與發展
  • 地球與行星科學(雜項)

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