The ship is a floating piece of space, a place without a place that exists by itself, closed in on the ocean. It drifts from port to port, a fragment of the Old World sailing toward the New. In its cabin, the garden of the colony is planted; in its hold, the seeds of revolution are stored. It is the greatest reserve of the imagination. For where can you find the most absolute heterotopia? Not in museums (where time accumulates), not in cemeteries (where eternity rests), but on the ship. It goes as far as the colonies, seeking the treasure that lies at the ends of the earth. It is the ark, the vessel, the errant container of all dreams.
We live in a world of heterotopias. The cinema screen, the festival grounds, the motel room, the prison, the library during the night—each one bends our sense of time and space into a different shape. heterotopie
There is a place that is no place. A space that is physically marked on a map, yet simultaneously undoes every marker we have for "inside" and "outside." Michel Foucault called it heterotopia —a space of otherness. The ship is a floating piece of space,