“Spatial Checkpoints of Power: A Study of Smooth and Striated Spaces in Ghassan Kanafani’s The Land of Sad Oranges (1962) and Richard Wright’s Big Boy Leaves Home (1938).”
Salma Fayez Mohamed Ibrahim; Abdelsalam, Samar;
Abstract
Throughout the two short stories "The Land of Sad Oranges" (1962) by Ghassan Kanafani and "Big Boy Leaves Home" (1938) by Richard Wright, spaces are not only created, mapped, and described but also negotiated and changed. Spaces are not passive vessels in which the plot unfolds, but rather directors of action and shapers of identity. Using Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's notions of smooth and striated spaces sheds light on the profound ways in which the state apparatus determines human relations to spaces and geography. The act of crossing borders between different divisions of geography not only brings about transformation but also begets tragedy. The current research demonstrates that different power structures change spaces of freedom to places of confinement through complex transformational interventions aimed at changing smooth spaces' characteristics to striated ones. Those transformations are not final or absolute but partial and gradual.
Other data
| Title | “Spatial Checkpoints of Power: A Study of Smooth and Striated Spaces in Ghassan Kanafani’s The Land of Sad Oranges (1962) and Richard Wright’s Big Boy Leaves Home (1938).” | Authors | Salma Fayez Mohamed Ibrahim; Abdelsalam, Samar | Keywords | space, geography, smooth, power, borders, land, place. | Issue Date | 2025 | Publisher | Andromeda Publishing and Academic Services, London, UK | Journal | Arabic and World Literature: Comparative and Multidisciplinary Perspectives (AWL) | Volume | 2025 | Issue | 1 | Start page | 1 | End page | 9 |
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