“Being then nothing” Physicality, abjection and creation in Janice Galloway’s short fiction
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Universidad de Murcia
Abstract
This article explores the prominence of the body in Janice Galloway‟s short fiction. Drawing mainly on Kristeva‟s notions of the semiotic and the abject, the argument initially establishesthe central place ofphysicality in Galloway‟s poetics. Her creative project is inspired by a desire to transmit in writing the experience of being alive, of howbeing is intrinsically fragile, inexorably bound to extinction. In a particularly sharp manner that engages the reader more actively than her novels, her short stories exhibit both formally and thematically an interaction of the symbolic and the semiotic. As being attentive to life entails an awareness of death if one is to write realistically, the ensuing discussion of stories from her three collections –Blood (1991), Where you find it (1996) and Jellyfish (2015)–reveals that abjection, the extreme version of the semiotic that threatens to cancel out the symbolic, is paramount in her creative universe.
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Sacido Romero, J. (2019). “Being then nothing”. International Journal of English Studies, 19(1), 133-150. https://doi.org/10.6018/ijes.348531
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https://doi.org/10.6018/ijes.348531Sponsors
This article is part of the research carried out in the project Intersections: Gender and Identity in the Short Fiction of Contemporary British Women Writersfunded by the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, Government of Spain (FEM2017-83084-P –AEI/FEDER) and the Competitive Reference Research Group Discourse and Identity (GRC2015/002 GI-1924–Xunta de Galicia)
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© Service Publications, University of Murcia, 2019. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License








