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House of Pain: Home Invasion and the Gentrification Sublime

Peacock, James

Authors



Abstract

This article proceeds from the observation that fictional residents of homes in gentrifying neighbourhoods are rarely permitted to get too comfortable. They perceive their domestic havens always to be under threat: sometimes from malevolent invaders who are all too real, sometimes from less substantial phenomena – ghosts, memories, guilt, the incipient realisation that from another point of view, the gentrifier might also be regarded as an invader. Whatever form the invader takes, and whatever its intentions, by crossing the threshold (literally or metaphorically) it “disrupts boundaries”; the spatial hierarchies and strict divisions between the domestic and the outside are collapsed; and “normative understandings of ‘home' are problematised” (Fiddler 2013, 282). Peacock examines the recurrence of home invasion tropes in two contemporary gentrification novels – Brian Platzer's Bed-Stuy is Burning (2017) and Cari Luna’s The Revolution of Every Day (2013) – which focus on the domestic interior as a privileged, cathected signifying space both for gentrifiers and those resisting its predations. Home invasion, enacted, threatened or even just imagined, can result in a glimpse of what Peacock calls “the gentrification sublime,” through which the resident is forced to recognise that the aesthetics and ethics of the domestic are produced by and interwoven with larger structural forces.

Citation

Peacock, J. (in press). House of Pain: Home Invasion and the Gentrification Sublime. English Studies, 106(1 (2025)), 92-109. https://doi.org/10.1080/0013838x.2025.2462886

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 22, 2024
Online Publication Date Feb 27, 2025
Deposit Date Mar 21, 2025
Journal English Studies
Print ISSN 0013-838X
Electronic ISSN 1744-4217
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 106
Issue 1 (2025)
Pages 92-109
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/0013838x.2025.2462886
Keywords contemporary fiction, gentrification, domestic space, real estate, neighbourhood, globalisation
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1107118