This book, which is the fruit of papers presented at the seventh
Cambridge French Graduate Conference, offers innovative analyses of how
space can provide metaphors for human thoughts, utterances and
experiences. The authors cross-fertilise different approaches to the
significance of space as a thematic and structuring principle in French
and Francophone poetry, prose, philosophy and film. They are interested
in three broad areas of enquiry: how spaces can be suffused with
explorations of identity; how the dividing work done by maps marks and
makes spaces; and how particular questions are thrown up by urban
spaces. Throughout, the book examines the symbiotic relationship between
internal and external, between delimitation and difference.