This study examines Martyna Majok's Sanctuary City through the frameworks of geopathology and algorithmic governance, focusing on how post-9/11 immigration systems reshape subjectivity, space, affect, and gendered care. Drawing on Una Chaudhuri's concept of geopathology and Ruha Benjamin's notion of coded exposure, the study interprets citizenship as an algorithmic structure that produces legality and exclusion. Through close readings of liminal spaces such as the bare stage and the fire escape, the play presents sanctuary as a temporary and unstable space shaped by surveillance and administrative control. The analysis further argues that care and intimacy, particularly within marginalized immigrant lives, function as strategic survival mechanisms rather than purely ethical bonds. Finally, using the concept of apoptosis, the study demonstrates how immigrant exclusion operates through gradual and normalized forms of systemic elimination in post-9/11 America.
목차
Ⅰ. 들어가며 Ⅱ. 경계 위의 공간: ‘텅 빈 무대’와 유예된 안식처 Ⅲ. 전략적 친밀성과 정동의 알고리즘화 Ⅳ. 나가며 인용문헌 Abstract
키워드
Sanctuary CityMartyna MajokgeopathologyUna Chaudhuriapoptosisalgorithmic governancewomen immigrantscodification of care