Chora
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chora (Greek χωρα) can mean one of several things:
- Localities
- It is usually the name of the greatest or more important town or village of a Greek island.
- Chora District in the Uruzgan province of Afghanistan.
- Chora (woreda), a district in the Oromia Region of Ethiopia
- The Chora Church, a Byzantine church in İstanbul.
- In philosophy
- Plato uses chora in a sense close to space, or place in space; the milieu in which Forms materialise.
- In modern philosophy:
-
- "Chora has been object of considerable philosophical reflection, especially in contemporary French philosophy, having taken the status of a master term in the writings of Julia Kristeva,... and more recently of Jacques Derrida. (...)
-
- Chora, which Derrida insists must be understood without any definite article, has an acknowledged role at the very foundations of the concept of spatiality, place and placing: it signifies, at its most literal level, notions of "space", "location", "site", "region", "locale", "country": but it also contains an irreducible, yet often overlooked connection with the functions of feminity, being associated with a series of sexually-coded terms -- "mother","nurse","receptacle", and "imprint-bearer". — Elizabeth Grosz (1995) Space, time and perversion Routledge, New York & London :112
- Other