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Here and there

An introspective look into loneliness, distance, and intimacy Here and There is a dreamlike depiction of the ghostly textures covering the surface of the world and those in it. The purpose of the novel is to examine how we interact with foreign spaces and what they do to identity through the lenses...

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Main Author: Marx, Brendan
Other Authors: Coovadia, Imraan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Languages and Literatures 2025
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Marx, Brendan
author2 Coovadia, Imraan
author_browse Coovadia, Imraan
Marx, Brendan
author_facet Coovadia, Imraan
Marx, Brendan
author_sort Marx, Brendan
collection Thesis
description An introspective look into loneliness, distance, and intimacy Here and There is a dreamlike depiction of the ghostly textures covering the surface of the world and those in it. The purpose of the novel is to examine how we interact with foreign spaces and what they do to identity through the lenses of Yui Nishikawa and Charlie who both either are or have navigated a foreign city for a number of years. Tokyo was chosen as the primary setting for the novel because of its unique relationship with identity and loneliness; its overwhelming anonymity despite it being the most populated city in the world. This contradiction opens the characters to questions of other contradictions; of self and other, foreign and familiar, belonging and not, of space. What interests me is what these spaces do to us, how we traverse them, fill them, or vacate them; the reformation of ourselves into something other and how these new identities find life back where they came from. The novel plays with the ideas of absence and presence and, through its focus on its descriptions of the inanimate, of architecture and contrasting spaces, tries to situate identity as a reflection of these spaces and the memories of them when they are abandoned. The question of the novel is really a question of what is left behind, of a hauntology of space and object and intimacies, how they carve themselves into identity and what remains when they are gone. The result is a dreamlike, unattached world of half things, half here and half there, half self and half other, half meaningful and half not. The novel looks to show how new spaces, new intimacies fracture then redefine, how absence can fill up various kinds of spaces, both within and without and what we are to do with the aftermath of the feeling of a neon-signed alley and the eyes of those we adored within the colours.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:14.045Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher School of Languages and Literatures
publisherStr School of Languages and Literatures
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41789 Here and there Marx, Brendan Coovadia, Imraan Novel An introspective look into loneliness, distance, and intimacy Here and There is a dreamlike depiction of the ghostly textures covering the surface of the world and those in it. The purpose of the novel is to examine how we interact with foreign spaces and what they do to identity through the lenses of Yui Nishikawa and Charlie who both either are or have navigated a foreign city for a number of years. Tokyo was chosen as the primary setting for the novel because of its unique relationship with identity and loneliness; its overwhelming anonymity despite it being the most populated city in the world. This contradiction opens the characters to questions of other contradictions; of self and other, foreign and familiar, belonging and not, of space. What interests me is what these spaces do to us, how we traverse them, fill them, or vacate them; the reformation of ourselves into something other and how these new identities find life back where they came from. The novel plays with the ideas of absence and presence and, through its focus on its descriptions of the inanimate, of architecture and contrasting spaces, tries to situate identity as a reflection of these spaces and the memories of them when they are abandoned. The question of the novel is really a question of what is left behind, of a hauntology of space and object and intimacies, how they carve themselves into identity and what remains when they are gone. The result is a dreamlike, unattached world of half things, half here and half there, half self and half other, half meaningful and half not. The novel looks to show how new spaces, new intimacies fracture then redefine, how absence can fill up various kinds of spaces, both within and without and what we are to do with the aftermath of the feeling of a neon-signed alley and the eyes of those we adored within the colours. 2025-09-12T09:13:42Z 2025-09-12T09:13:42Z 2025 2025-09-11T10:24:05Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41789 en eng application/pdf School of Languages and Literatures Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Novel
Marx, Brendan
Here and there
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Here and there
title_full Here and there
title_fullStr Here and there
title_full_unstemmed Here and there
title_short Here and there
title_sort here and there
topic Novel
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41789
work_keys_str_mv AT marxbrendan hereandthere