
Post-Apocalyptic Redefinition of Homeless Spaces in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road
Author(s) -
Samuel Tascón Olmedo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
es review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2531-1654
pISSN - 2531-1646
DOI - 10.24197/ersjes.41.2020.123-142
Subject(s) - reinterpretation , defamiliarization , perspective (graphical) , space (punctuation) , aesthetics , norm (philosophy) , sociology , epistemology , art , philosophy , visual arts , linguistics
Homelessness undergoes an important change in a post-apocalyptical setting: it becomes the norm, the only reality for the survivors. Through a process of defamiliarization and reinterpretation of the new reality, space goes back to its mythical sphere, where a permanent sense of anxiety and distress dominates everything. In the present paper, a new vision of homelessness in the characters and spaces portrayed in The Road is presented. Focusing on the new spatial conception will offer a fresh perspective to interpret how a father struggles in his attempts to instill in his boy a strong system of moral values while travelling through the vastness of a space without boundaries that only has one defining and common characteristic: the road.