I was moving forward into space, but I would never come home again.
—Bryn Greenwood, All the Ugly and Wonderful ThingsHome isn't a place, it's a feeling.
—Cecelia Ahern, Love, RosieONE OF THE PRIVILEGES of being an outsider is that one is not expected to play by the insider's rules. Outsiders, whether conscious and volitional or existential, have transgressed boundaries. Metaphorically or pragmatically, they have moved across space to cross over a boundary and stand on the edge of it—with or without success. Then, their existence itself becomes a breaking of boundaries. Outsiderdom, to a greater or lesser extent, permeates Alice Munro's texts, from the very beginning of her literary career. In Lives of Girls and Women Del Jordan, true to her surname, is the first to traverse figuratively a bridge and explore the other bank. She actually defines herself as an “outsider” (LiGW, 69). Rose, the protagonist of Who Do You Think You Are? despite her efforts to fit in, will remain on the threshold wherever she goes. She will have the freedom of the stranger, the freedom to leave; her permanence, however protracted, will tend to be temporary. The stranger / outsider stands between friend and enemy, order and chaos, the inside and the outside. The stranger, to quote Zygmunt Bauman, stands for “the treacherousness of friends, for the cunning disguise of the enemies, for fallibility of order, vulnerability of the inside.”
In Alice Munro's fiction, the representations of the protagonist as outsider carry undercurrent processes of assimilation, or of attempts at being assimilated, again with or without success. Psychoanalysis and sociology alike have drawn attention to such dynamics, and to the circumstances that the outsider or the stranger lacks. It could be lack of cultural affiliation, of community, of belonging, of affect, of home. A preoccupation with feeling at home or not feeling at home recurs almost obsessively in these texts.