Configuration of Transient Shelters as Alternative Spaces through Nomadic Acts in Doris Lessing’s “An Old Woman and Her Cat” Cover Image

Configuration of Transient Shelters as Alternative Spaces through Nomadic Acts in Doris Lessing’s “An Old Woman and Her Cat”
Configuration of Transient Shelters as Alternative Spaces through Nomadic Acts in Doris Lessing’s “An Old Woman and Her Cat”

Author(s): Özge Üstündağ Güvenç
Subject(s): Social Norms / Social Control, Theory of Literature, British Literature
Published by: Uluslararası Kıbrıs Üniversitesi
Keywords: Doris Lessing; Henri Lefebvre; Rosi Braidotti; alternative space; nomadic female;

Summary/Abstract: Doris Lessing’s short story “An Old Woman and Her Cat” from her collection, The Temptation of Jack Orkney, revolves around the nomadic experiences of an old and homeless woman in various places and her survival under poor living circumstances with her cat. The places occupied by the old woman in this story such as the Council flats, the room in the slum and the ruined flat in a wealthy neighbourhood cannot be considered as proper homes where people have a sense of belonging; rather, they are just material places she tries to appropriate as shelters temporarily on the way without a feeling of warmth and attachment to them. Focusing on the woman and the cat’s relationship with their surrounding provides a discussion on space and nomadism within the framework of Henri Lefebvre’s spatial tripartite - the perceived, the conceived and the lived - which is related to Rosi Braidotti’s theory on nomadism. It also reveals the social norms and values, which disregard an old woman and her cat’s struggle for life in a metropolis.

  • Issue Year: 25/2019
  • Issue No: 99
  • Page Range: 605-622
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English