heterotopia

See also: heterotópia and heterotopią

English

Etymology

hetero- + -topia

Noun

heterotopia (countable and uncountable, plural heterotopias)

  1. (pathology) Normal tissue (or an organ) present at an abnormal part of the body
    Synonyms: allotopia, ectopia, ectopy, dystopia, malposition
  2. (ecology) The occurrence of an organism in a number of different habitats
  3. (philosophy, literary criticism) A space which is alien to what is normal within the society, variably presenting a utopian vision in physical form or serving to segregate subversive elements from the wider society.
    Coordinate terms: utopia, topia
    Michel Foucault gave the museum and the mental hospital as two different examples of heterotopias.
    • 2002, James W Flanagan, David M Gunn, Paula M McNutt, "Imagining" biblical worlds:
      For Foucault, heterotopias are not imagined places but real places that almost delete themselves from public consciousness. They are null sites in awareness, yet inevitable and vital to the construction of space.

Polish

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /xɛ.tɛ.rɔˈtɔ.pja/
  • Rhymes: -ɔpja
  • Syllabification: he‧te‧ro‧to‧pia

Noun

heterotopia f

  1. (pathology) heterotopia (normal tissue (or an organ) present at an abnormal part of the body)
  2. (philosophy) heterotopia (space which is alien to what is normal within the society, variably presenting a utopian vision in physical form or serving to segregate subversive elements from the wider society)

Declension

Further reading

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