School of Culture and Communication - Theses

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    The Quantified Self and beyond: Design guiding discourse in human/data assemblages
    Jethani, Suneel ( 2022)
    This thesis examines the emergence and growth of the quantified self. The quantified self has developed from a loosely organised, internationally distributed group of self-experimenters advocating for data-driven approaches to everyday life to a catch all descriptor which reframes broader practices of self-tracking in a way that downplays its controlling a/effects on human subjectivity. This popularisation of self-tracking, as a eudaemonic praxis in contemporary digital culture has seen the emergence of a generative discourse which shapes the conception, design, and implementation of data-garnering sociotechnical systems. In the thesis, I argue that if interdiscursivity across different situated contexts of self-tracking is foregrounded then some of its underacknowledged material a/effects can be brought to light. As self-tracking practices are introduced and assimilated into many facets of our everyday lives, the intensities of self-tracking become portable, and normalised, across contexts bringing with them complex, dialectical notions of control and freedom. To better understand this tension between control and freedom, within and across sites where self-quantification is occurring, I use two research strategies: (1) examining existing analytical frameworks for understanding the relation between discourse and materiality developed in the area of Science and Technology Studies (STS) and adapting them for application within a Critical Data Studies approach to studying self-tracking, and (2) assembling and analysing data that has been collected from documented traces of self-tracking technology design, development and use—including discourses reflecting first-person accounts, newspaper and magazine articles, social media content, patents, technical documentation, marketing material, and published research across a range of disciplines. Taking an approach informed by Critical Data Studies (CDS) and Science and Technology Studies (STS), I trace the emergence of the quantified self as a means of describing a range of self-experimental practices and consider how it becomes portable to other settings. I do this through four case studies which examine relations of freedom and control in: the Quantified Self Movement, Precision Medicine, Workplaces, and Remote Electronic Monitoring. In each of these exemplars, the thesis highlights mechanisms of control and material strategies for transparency and resistance. In examining these case studies, I clarify the processes by which the scope of self-tracking technology broadens, and its intensity accumulates. The final chapter considers the emergence of a mutual praxis of critique and design that helps one (re)imagine of the power relations that are embedded into sociotechnical systems of self-tracking by way of a meta-discourse on human datafication, control, and agency.
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    Race, Capital and Desire in Roberto Bolaño: Genre in 2666
    Cao, Jack ( 2022)
    Roberto Bolano’s posthumously published 2666 is a novel split into five parts without a clear logic of organisation. I argue that its unity lies in the way each section takes up and then dissolves the conventions of a different genre. Before engaging in a close reading of the work, I seek to establish the importance of generic interpretation in contemporary literary criticism by arguing that genres are not simply categories for sorting texts, but names for complex representational mechanics through which a text relates to its social world. Upon this basis, I show that the movement of the novel reproduces the same trajectory in each of its five parts: each section uses the conventions of the genre but only to negate its usual organisation of meaning and therefore relation to history. Ultimately, I argue, these structures of experience decompose in confrontation with the colonial destruction of life. Since there is no single received literary form that adequately represents the transformations of racial violence, Bolano negates a procession of genres as a way of testifying to the complex matrix of power, death and revolt in the contemporary world. (Apologies for absence of accent on Bolano but the system does not let me type them)
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    Cultural China on the Small Screen: The Construction of a New Nationalism
    Xiong, Fan ( 2022)
    This thesis presents a study of China’s Science and Education channel, CCTV-10, between 2001 and 2013, arguing that it played a vital role in (re)constructing Chinese cultural nationalism in response to external globalising forces and internal commercialising trends. By exploring the complexities of CCTV-10 programmes’ form and content in the context of its historical development and policy environment, I examine this channel’s place in the national imaginary of a new, twenty-first century China and explore the cultural space of negotiations thus created between intellectuals, state media, and the viewing public. The main focus of our discussion is given to the emergent power of media intellectuals via CCTV-10, their vision of a cultural China, and their changing relationships with both the policy-making state and the general public. Through this, I aim to trace the institutionalisation of a new TV culture that developed, through initiatives taken by Chinese media intellectuals, into a distinctive brand of cultural nationalism under state supervision. My objective is to test the hypothesis that the case of CCTV-10 demonstrates the convergence of culture, economy, technology, and politics hewing out new possibilities for a multi-vocal public sphere. I argue that the channel’s nationwide popularity signified the (re)ascendant role of intellectuals as a key force in China’s post-socialist public culture. In terms of methodology, my work on public culture has grounding in intellectual history, media studies, and policy and censorship analyses, all of which I combine in this thesis. The chapters have been divided into three major parts with separate purposes: first to contextualise CCTV-10’s birth and growth, then to explore its transitional point, and finally to analyse its representative texts. I have intentionally given a large portion of the thesis over to contextualising and mapping in order to show the texts both in conjunction with and as a response to their contexts. Overall, I employ three concrete methods of analysis: rich contextualisation of the study of emergent discourses of culture and nation in contemporary China, policy studies under three different leaderships (Jiang Zemin, Hu Jintao, and Xi Jinping), and textual / formal analyses of television content. The significance of this study is twofold. On the one hand, it offers compelling evidence of highly diverse voices and heterogeneous directives at work in CCTV-10 programmes and thus challenges any simplistic assumption of the purely propagandistic effects of China’s official TV channels. On the other hand, it explores CCTV-10’s increasing populism in the light of Chinese intellectuals’ perennial quest to shape and guide public opinion, thus revealing historical links that problematise any superficial impression of the channel’s commercialisation and marketisation. In sum, I demonstrate that during the years covered by this thesis, a vibrant “shared space”, if not a public sphere in the strict Habermasian sense, was taking shape at the very heart of official media: CCTV, the mouthpiece of the Party.
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    Fantasy and Fertility: Women’s Reproductive Bodies in Medieval Literature
    Greig, Adelaide Jillian June ( 2022)
    This thesis explores how the reproductive potential of women’s bodies is portrayed in a selection of medieval literary texts from the Four Branches of the Mabinogi to Malory’s Arthuriad. Through a focus on fantasy in these narratives, I seek to further our understanding of how medieval writers and readers addressed social questions through fantastical story-telling. Literary fantasies, unburdened by the limits of historical realities, are fertile grounds for the expression of otherwise inaccessible desires, hopes, and critiques. This study charts how a series of female characters use the freedoms made possible by fantasy to reclaim the power of their fertility from patriarchal appropriation. I analyse Welsh, French, and English texts from the mid-to-late medieval period to juxtapose several case studies drawn from varied cultural milieux. My chosen narratives demonstrate the diverse ways in which imaginative literature questions the gendered roles of women’s reproductive bodies in medieval societies. The transhistorical and translinguistic scope of this project illustrates how multiple medieval narratives dispute the oppression of women’s bodies, and that this challenge is not exclusive to one writer, culture, or century. In my first chapter I consider Rhiannon, Branwen, Aranrhod, and Blodeuedd of Pedair Cainc Y Mabinogi, or the Four Branches of the Mabinogi, a Welsh tale surviving in two fourteenth-century manuscripts. The second chapter examines the ladies from three twelfth-century lais by Marie de France: “Guigemar,” “Yonec,” and “Milun.” And in the third chapter I approach the later medieval English canon through the Wife of Bath’s “Prologue” and “Tale” by Geoffrey Chaucer, and several women from Thomas Malory’s Arthuriad. The female characters to be discussed refuse to be framed and defined solely by their potential to give birth to a male protagonist around whom the text will then develop. They behave in a variety of ways which actively and unintentionally resist the childbearing function expected of their fertility. Instead, these women seek the freedom to enjoy their own autonomous bodily expression. In my attention to these moments of resistance, I engage with previous scholarship on representations of women in medieval texts and the functions of literary fantasy. This study reads the bodies of fictional medieval women as encompassing both the earthly and the magical, borrowing a productive mundanity from one and the opportunity for wonder from the other.
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    Kenneth Slessor’s Gothic Harbour
    Cornwallis, Darcy James Sharpe ( 2022)
    Kenneth Slessor (1901-1971) often turned to Sydney Harbour as a productive site for his poetry and writing. Reading Slessor’s Harbour in its historical and cultural contexts, this thesis argues that he developed a poetic concerned with loss, memory, sexual desire and the uncanny return of repressed forces from the Harbour’s depths. The thesis begins in 1927, a year which saw two important episodes of drowning in Sydney Harbour: the death of Slessor’s friend Joe Lynch, subject of his later elegy “Five Bells” (1939), and the Greycliffe ferry disaster, to which Slessor responded in the pages of Sydney magazine Smith’s Weekly. In the wake of these twin tragedies, Slessor created a distinctive poetic vision of Sydney Harbour which fused imagery and atmospherics originating in Sydney’s popular press with a Gothic-modernist aesthetic he adopted at least in part from the work of T.S. Eliot (1888-1965). This thesis proceeds to read Slessor’s Harbour poetry as it developed through the 1930s, before leaving Sydney Harbour to read Slessor’s poetic evocations of Kings Cross and the battlefields of the Second World War, arguing that his Harbour poetic infuses poetry that may at first sight seem unrelated to the Harbour. It concludes with remarks about Slessor’s relationship to what Michael Cathcart has called ‘necronationalism’, exploring some of the ramifications and consequences of Slessor’s poetic project of populating an iconic watery Australian space with dead bodies and ghostly apparitions. The thesis draws on theories of the uncanny and the weird, derived from Freud among others, as well as Maria Tumarkin’s notion of the ‘traumascape’, and recent scholarship in literary studies which emphasises the role and agency of the sea, in order to formulate a new reading of Slessor’s relationship to Sydney Harbour and to literary categories such as modernism, the Gothic, and elegy. By recasting Slessor’s Harbour as a traumatising Gothic space, this thesis gestures toward a new perspective on the work of a seminal figure in Australian literary modernism.
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    Imaging a Biocentric Australia: Environmentalism and Aboriginalism in the Art and Life of Clifton Pugh (1924-1990)
    Robinson, Debbie Louise ( 2022)
    This thesis concerns the Australian modernist artist Clifton Pugh (1924-1990) and his emotional and intellectual engagement with the Australian environment, its Aboriginal inhabitants, and the way in which he expressed an environmental aesthetic and ethical awareness through art, activism, and an environmentally sustainable bush lifestyle. Renowned as a dramatic painter of primal landscapes beset by volatile elemental forces and predatory beasts, Pugh contributed greatly to national imagery during the 1950s and 1960s. He won the coveted Archibald Prize for portraiture three times and his work is represented in all major galleries and most regional and university collections in Australia. But in recent decades, Pugh has fallen from critical favour. The current art-historical appraisal of his oeuvre is outdated and limited to a narrow temporal period between 1959 and 1963. This thesis presents a study of Pugh for the twenty-first century, employing theories of environmental aesthetics, ethics, and Aboriginalism. It demonstrates how Pugh communicated environmental messages through art, examining for the first time Pugh’s use of Aboriginal motifs and techniques and the reasons why he represented Aboriginal people in his landscape painting and how this interest intersected with his environmental attitude and approach to conservation. It argues Pugh presents a biocentric vision of the Australian landscape to promote an environmental culture that values and respects Australian nature. Furthermore, his perception of Aboriginal art, culture, and stewardship form a significant part of this perspective, shaping his environmental attitude and visual orientation towards nature in art. This new interpretation of Pugh is not only relevant to Australia but also has global implications. It represents a local ideation of a broader shift in Western thought about the human-nature relationship that emerged during the 1960s.
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    Bakhtinian Chronotopes in the Campus Novel; and a Short Story Collection: Gutsy Little Unit
    Croser, Rebecca Michelle ( 2022)
    This thesis contributes to Bakhtinian chronotope studies by identifying and examining the campus chronotope produced in campus novels. In the campus novel genre, campus environs are more than simply a setting in which to locate action: the university is a geographical and psychological site that occupies a central position within the text and acts as an influential character determinant. Given that campus spatiotemporalities underpin campus novels, Mikhail Bakhtin’s theory of the chronotope presents as an apposite analytical framework with which to study them. In the literary analysis component, I consider three distinct chronotopic forms – dominant, intervallic and motivic – to present chronotopic readings of three campus novels. Taking Zadie Smith’s On Beauty (2005) as an exemplar campus novel, I examine the narrative opportunities afforded by the spatiotemporal constraints of the novel’s dominant campus chronotope. This examination subsequently informs the argument that competing intervallic chronotopes of campus, crime fiction and Greek tragedy create a notable chronotopic hybridity in Donna Tartt’s The Secret History (1992). The campus chronotope also supports reframing and extending the diegetic value of Bakhtin’s staircase chronotopic motif and his established interpretation of stairways as sites of threshold and encounter. I contend that Vladimir Nabokov amplifies the stairway to the level of a stage in his campus novel Pnin (1957) by exploiting its associated spatiotemporal elements of performance, display and spectacle. In the creative component, I position the campus chronotope as a generative writing device to present a collection of interlinked short stories and flash fiction titled Gutsy Little Unit. Threaded through many of the stories is the campus chronotope in dominant, intervallic or motivic form. The collection is primarily focalised through the character of Nessie Loewe, though several characters in her orbit are protagonists in their own dedicated stories. Nabokov’s Pnin strongly influences the configuration of this short story collection; I take inspiration from its lightly comical tone and interlinked story structure of impressionistic sketches of Timofey Pnin’s life in and around a college.
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    Autofiction and the Crisis of Reproduction: Textual Politics in the New Century
    Robinson, Nicholas James ( 2022)
    Abstract To understand the significance of the proliferation of autofictions in recent years, I present two seminal iterations of the form in the American context for analysis—Ben Lerner’s 10:04 and Maggie Nelson’s The Argonauts. Published within a year of each other, and both narrating the early 2010s, these two important works mark a crucial period within contemporary American literary production that, I argue, is marked by the widening awareness of crisis—in particular, its impact on the writing process and the future culture of literary reception. I argue that the intensely situated and self-reflexive mode of autofictions suggest that crisis strikes at the heart of the economic, ideological and temporal foundations of textual reproduction—it challenges not just our sense of the future as guaranteed, but the purpose and viability of artmaking in the shadow of these ever-widening challenges. To understand how new autofictions encounter this fraught literary future, I have invented the rubric of the ‘Telos of the Text’, a way of thinking that reframes crisis in the world as crisis of textual reproduction. Autofictions don’t solve the problem of the Telos of the Text (the problem of textual reproduction in times of crisis) —but remediate the aporia of crisis towards new formulations of the reader–writer relation. Problems such as climate change and income inequality come to be redescribed as writerly and readerly problems. In 10:04 and The Argonauts the reader comes to represent a damaged futurity that is accessible by virtue of the pressure exerted by crisis on time itself. This thesis incorporates a creative component which explores the new ‘timeliness’ of crisis through not only autofictional forms, but other kinds of experimental, and traditional literary modes. I argue in the critical that the timeliness of autofiction is a textual singularity enabled by crisis—more specifically, the flux of past, present and future that thinking and writing with crisis entails. In the creative component, I demonstrate that this is a timeliness which will continue to haunt the reader–writer relation, not only in autofiction, but contemporary fictions more broadly.
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    Larrikins, Listeners and Lifeline: inside Australian comedy chatcast The Little Dum Dum Club
    Knowles, Matilda ( 2022)
    Australian comedy chatcast The Little Dum Dum Club (2010 – present) is a loosely structured weekly podcast hosted by two stand-up comedians and good mates Tommy Dassalo and Karl Chandler. Each episode usually features one to three guests, often also stand-up comedians, who casually chat with Chandler and Dassalo and joke about their lives and the world around them. In this thesis I establish how hosts, guests and listeners of comedy chatcasts co-create their performance conventions by collaboratively and often unwittingly combining a range of social norms, stand-up comedy techniques and conversational skills. Understanding how these conventions are created and shared shows how comedy chatcasts influence host and listener behaviour in podcast-related spaces and in their broader lives. As I demonstrate, comedy chatcasts have influence even when the intention of the hosts and guests is only to be funny. The comedians in The Little Dum Dum Club are always looking for the joke, and the humour is often insult-based and puerile. These are contemporary larrikin performances, involving taking the piss out of one another, themselves and authority in an egalitarian way, a shared self-deprecation that also encompasses a sense of mateship. Rather than uncritically reiterating these dominant conventions of white Australian masculinity, however, the comedic performances in the podcast both represent and critique them. The performance conventions of comedy chatcasts create a “safe space” in which comedians can humorously explore ideas and respond to changing cultural norms in a way that does not radically reshape them but does suggest opportunities for intervention and evolution. The impact of this is clear, for instance, in the meaningful but humorous discussions of suicidality on the podcast and how joking about lived experience reframes flippant suicide jokes to lessen shame and promote help-seeking behaviour among listeners and comedians. Listeners likewise have a set of conventions which enable them to perform their fandom of the comedy chatcast. Building on podcast scholarship about intimacy and parasocial relationships, I show how listeners attempt to replicate the mateship form of friendship performed on the podcast using its jokingly abusive comedy style. For listeners of The Little Dum Dum Club, successfully performing their listenership requires navigating a series of at times conflicting conventions which are often at odds with broader norms of appropriateness and do not necessarily find a willing audience. Podcasts have niche global audiences and conventions need to be interpreted and performed to receptive audiences in order to be successful. The Little Dum Dum Club is unique in its content, but not in its construction. This thesis shows how comedy chatcasts as new media enable analysis of the shifts in and discussions of our cultural norms that happen in non-radical, flexible and playful ways. Through such analysis, we can see how comedy chatcasts can be influential in minor and major ways for those involved.
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    Guests, Hosts, Ghosts: Art Residencies and Cross-Cultural Exchange
    La Rosa, Miriam ( 2022)
    This thesis investigates art residencies as sites of hospitality. It analyses two cross-cultural residency projects I developed: a residency organised on standard lines, involving art travel, and a hybrid residency, involving virtual and in-person elements. My discussions reflect on the conditions of art residencies before and after the COVID-19 pandemic, explaining the distinction between visitation and invitation, the ethics of working in a place that is not 'your own home,' and the potential of the gift exchange to challenge fixed binary roles such as host/guest, insider/outsider, giver/receiver. The thesis proposes a new understanding of the changing relationships between art residencies and artists through the curatorial implications of the act of showing and of hospitality.