In this article, Alexei Warshawski explores themes of architecture, fragmentation, and ontology (in the sense of existence or Being as such) in two speculative fiction novels, China Miéville’s The City and the City (2009) and Ken MacLeod’s Learning the World (2005). MacLeod’s and Miéville’s engagement with postmodernism, read alongside Heidegger, reveal that no matter how fragmented our architecture, and whether we do or don’t truly dwell, our ontology is greatly contingent on the architecture which surrounds us, and our ability to exist within and alongside architectural constructs is an undeniably and increasingly precarious one
This article discusses peculiarities of the implementation of the French new novel basic principles ...
This essay examines each of the novels for their individual ideas of worldmaking, using aspects of G...
This paper seeks to learn from Stoke-on-Trent by asking questions about the ontologies of cities. It...
Postmodern writing styles merging with socio-cultural qualities of cosmopolitanism and metamodernism...
The dissertation develops an original ontology of place by reading Modernist literature (1864-1950) ...
Narratives employed when writing about a place and building a place have a central theme in common: ...
A parallel comparative study explores the link between the fundamental characteristics of the archit...
Post-war cities epitomise both a disjuncture and resonance between the end of the nation-state, on t...
This collection of thirteen original essays examines the ways in which literature and architecture h...
<p>This dissertation examines space as a privileged yet <italic>repressed</italic> site of cultural ...
Imaginaries have not only nurtured the entire history of the urban, they have saturated the lexicon ...
Narratives employed when writing about a place and building a place have a central theme in common: ...
The concept of the experience becomes relevant in the surrealist view of the city. It is one that h...
My dissertation engages with contemporary texts, cinema, and technology that emphasize the transform...
This article explores ontological instability in three contemporary New York novels. Drawing on Bria...
This article discusses peculiarities of the implementation of the French new novel basic principles ...
This essay examines each of the novels for their individual ideas of worldmaking, using aspects of G...
This paper seeks to learn from Stoke-on-Trent by asking questions about the ontologies of cities. It...
Postmodern writing styles merging with socio-cultural qualities of cosmopolitanism and metamodernism...
The dissertation develops an original ontology of place by reading Modernist literature (1864-1950) ...
Narratives employed when writing about a place and building a place have a central theme in common: ...
A parallel comparative study explores the link between the fundamental characteristics of the archit...
Post-war cities epitomise both a disjuncture and resonance between the end of the nation-state, on t...
This collection of thirteen original essays examines the ways in which literature and architecture h...
<p>This dissertation examines space as a privileged yet <italic>repressed</italic> site of cultural ...
Imaginaries have not only nurtured the entire history of the urban, they have saturated the lexicon ...
Narratives employed when writing about a place and building a place have a central theme in common: ...
The concept of the experience becomes relevant in the surrealist view of the city. It is one that h...
My dissertation engages with contemporary texts, cinema, and technology that emphasize the transform...
This article explores ontological instability in three contemporary New York novels. Drawing on Bria...
This article discusses peculiarities of the implementation of the French new novel basic principles ...
This essay examines each of the novels for their individual ideas of worldmaking, using aspects of G...
This paper seeks to learn from Stoke-on-Trent by asking questions about the ontologies of cities. It...