Abstract
W. J. T. Mitchell's "Spatial Form in Literature: Toward a General
Theory" (Critical Inquiry 6 [Spring 1980]: 539-67) raises some fundamental
questions about the concept of form itself and makes some large
claims for the centrality of spatial form not only in modern criticism but
in our entire culture. I wish to address a few of the questions raised by
his discussion. First, Mitchell posits an identity between spatial form and
"synchronic structural models" as if all explanatory models abstracted
from temporal alteration were necessarily spatial.