What does it mean to talk about subjectivity in the language of space,
and what are the political implications of doing so? A provocative and
illuminating work, Indifferent Boundaries explores the ways that
concepts of subjectivity are vitally grounded in metaphors of and
assumptions about space. Kathleen Kirby demonstrates how changes that
have taken place in real and conceptual space from the Renaissance to
the postmodern era have led to a critical rearticulation of the subject
by feminist, psychoanalytic, and poststructuralist theorists, among
others. Tracing changing ideas about the self--from the stable form of
the Enlightenment individual to the postmodern *sujet en procès--*Kirby
appraises both the liberatory possibilities and the everyday cultural
implications of the contemporary "space of the subject." This tenacious
and substantive investigation of the lexicon of space sheds much needed
light in previously dark corners of the poststructuralist edifice, and
is certain to appeal to a broad, interdisciplinary audience.