In her work, the modernist author Bryher construes identity as a quest ending beyond the frame of the narrative and beyond regulations. The simile of the interstice epitomises both narrative spaces and space in the texts, ranging from the figure of a split self at odds with the dominant geographical and social order, to the opening of an alternative space of freedom where life and expression become possible. The fragmentary and elliptical narratives recount the excentric trajectories of characters withdrawing from coercitive centres in times of transition from looming threats to catastrophic points of no return. A piece of travel writing, of poetic prose and a Künstlerroman at the same time, Bryher's autobiographical fiction shows her fictive persona encoding sapphic meanings in landscape descriptions so as to emancipate herself from, and outlive, an oppressive Edwardian domestic life. Historical fictions voice the testimonies of the exiles, the outcast and the conquered, who emigrate to preserve their individual integrity, or happen to die for their beliefs or through mere carelessness. They experience crisis situations in times of cataclysmic or insiduous change, which provoke territorial mutations and paradigmatic shifts. In the writer's memoirs as in her fiction, the quest for a proper identity is operated through several acts of positioning, on linguistic and narrative levels (within dialogical spaces and biography), on geographical and cognitive ones (since mental configurations can be mapped in topologies of the self), and eventually on social and cultural ones (with the opening of a third way, between a practice of the space and a poetics of the space).