Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination

This project examines the effects of the homeless body and the threat of homelessness on constructing a national imaginary that relies on the trope of locatability for recognition as a citizen-subject. The thesis argues that homelessness, the oft-figured specter of public space, functions as bodies...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sloss, Eric J.
Other Authors: Lain, Brian
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of North Texas 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500028/
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spelling ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc5000282017-03-17T08:41:08Z Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination Sloss, Eric J. homelessness home psychoanalysis abjection Homelessness -- United States. Homeless persons -- United States. Place (Philosophy) This project examines the effects of the homeless body and the threat of homelessness on constructing a national imaginary that relies on the trope of locatability for recognition as a citizen-subject. The thesis argues that homelessness, the oft-figured specter of public space, functions as bodies that are “pushed out” as citizen-subjects due to their inability maintain both discursive and material location. I argue that figures of “home” rely on the ever-present threat of dislocation to maintain a privileged position as the location of the consuming citizen-subject. That is, the presence of the dislocated homeless body haunts the discursive and material construction of home and its inhabitants. Homeless then becomes the uncanny inverse of home, functioning as an abjection that reifies home “place” as an arbiter of recognition in a neoliberal national imaginary. The chapters proceed to examine what some consider homeless “homes,” focusing on the reduction of the homeless condition to a place of inhabitance, or the lack thereof. This attempt to locate the homeless body becomes a symptom of the desire for recognition as a placed body. The thesis ends on a note of political possibility, figuring the uncanny as a rupture that evacuates language of signification and opens up space for a form of recognition without an over-determined identity. University of North Texas Lain, Brian Enck, Suzanne Vaughn, Holley 2014-05 Thesis or Dissertation Text https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500028/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc500028 English United States Public Sloss, Eric J. Copyright Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights Reserved.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic homelessness
home
psychoanalysis
abjection
Homelessness -- United States.
Homeless persons -- United States.
Place (Philosophy)
spellingShingle homelessness
home
psychoanalysis
abjection
Homelessness -- United States.
Homeless persons -- United States.
Place (Philosophy)
Sloss, Eric J.
Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination
description This project examines the effects of the homeless body and the threat of homelessness on constructing a national imaginary that relies on the trope of locatability for recognition as a citizen-subject. The thesis argues that homelessness, the oft-figured specter of public space, functions as bodies that are “pushed out” as citizen-subjects due to their inability maintain both discursive and material location. I argue that figures of “home” rely on the ever-present threat of dislocation to maintain a privileged position as the location of the consuming citizen-subject. That is, the presence of the dislocated homeless body haunts the discursive and material construction of home and its inhabitants. Homeless then becomes the uncanny inverse of home, functioning as an abjection that reifies home “place” as an arbiter of recognition in a neoliberal national imaginary. The chapters proceed to examine what some consider homeless “homes,” focusing on the reduction of the homeless condition to a place of inhabitance, or the lack thereof. This attempt to locate the homeless body becomes a symptom of the desire for recognition as a placed body. The thesis ends on a note of political possibility, figuring the uncanny as a rupture that evacuates language of signification and opens up space for a form of recognition without an over-determined identity.
author2 Lain, Brian
author_facet Lain, Brian
Sloss, Eric J.
author Sloss, Eric J.
author_sort Sloss, Eric J.
title Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination
title_short Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination
title_full Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination
title_fullStr Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination
title_full_unstemmed Homeless Abjection and the Uncanny “Place” of the National Imagination
title_sort homeless abjection and the uncanny “place” of the national imagination
publisher University of North Texas
publishDate 2014
url https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500028/
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