School of Culture and Communication - Theses

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    How to do things with sadness : from ontology to ethics in Derrida
    Pont, Antonia Ellen. (University of Melbourne, 2010)
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    Edith Alsop, Artist
    Di Sciascio, Peter W. ( 2013)
    Edith Alsop (1871 – 1958) is now considered a minor twentieth century Australian artist, but during her some fifty years of artistic activity she was much more highly regarded. Her oeuvre covers sketches, drawings, watercolours, pastels, relief prints and book illustrations. She also produced posters, commercial art, friezes and some oil paintings. The University of Melbourne holds the largest public collection of Alsop’s works, located at The Ian Potter Museum of Art. My thesis will question why she has been forgotten. I will demonstrate an active and important artistic life and an almost textbook development as a professional artist. I find that Alsop suffered from the now well-documented fate of the invisibility of women artists from about 1940. From her oeuvre I pay particular attention to her prints as a small but distinct part of her artistic output. In the 1980s, women artists were being rediscovered. I believe that her lack of rediscovery results from her minor and erratic performance as a printmaker, her concentration on drawing and watercolour (as being ‘lesser than oils’) as her favoured mediums and her lack of visibility in public collections. This thesis is by far the most extensive research into this artist to date, and therefore illuminates her life and provides an important basis, or context, for the consideration of any of her art.
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    The Age of Icons: Digitising the Self in Profile Images
    Antonellos, Madeleine Kayla ( 2018)
    In the “Age of Icons”, a digital echo of the self emerges in an online ecology where representations of the self and others are signified in virtual, globally networked profiles. In digital spaces, real and online friends, followers and connections collide. Social media platforms have evolved into dynamic and malleable communicative spaces, that guide an individual’s construction of a ‘profile’ on their network. The ‘profile image’, provides options for a user to express a visualisation of themselves, alongside multimodal presentations of personal content. This technologically-mediated icon of self, can portray a user’s actual or desired physical appearance, an identity that translates from the “real world” into online expressions of cultural, social and emotional values. Through developing an online presence, in singular, or interconnecting, social accounts or platforms, this thesis asks the question: how do we construct representations of ourselves online, using our social media profile pictures? Building on recent literature surrounding online image production, dissemination, and identity formation on social media, I have collected and coded extensive, qualitative data – gathered through semi-structured interviews – with a small study group of 21-35-year-old social media users. This thesis presents a thematic analysis of the process of creating an online identity and explores the adaptation of this online marker of identity to technological features of social media accounts. Finally, it examines impacts of profile pictures in the daily lives of social media users, where online and offline realities can intersect. The chosen case study is ‘profile images’: the literal, or figurative, public face a user wears when interacting in online, social media platforms. The thesis considers the interplay between varied forms of self-expression, and conceptions of identity in a user, as they live offline and online through their use of social media profiles.
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    The environment in English versions of the Grimms' and Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale literature, 1823–1899
    Tedeschi, Victoria ( 2016)
    This dissertation explores the intersections between literature and environmental history in nineteenth-century English versions of Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tale literature. While the success of the Grimms’ and Andersen’s fairy tale literature in England can be attributed to the inclusion of Christian principles, the privileging of individualism, the omission of licentious content and the focalisation of child protagonists, this dissertation argues that the tales were also valued for presenting an environmental ethos. English versions of the Grimms’ and Andersen’s fairy tales relayed anthropocentric ideas about nature which competed with a developing sense of environmentalism during a period of rapid environmental change. While these tales idealised the tremendous possibilities offered by the environment, nature is not prioritised above human interest; rather, these versions effectively highlight humanity’s destructive disposition by disempowering female and animal characters. By focusing on depictions of nature during a century of environmental devastation, this thesis contributes to our understanding of humanity’s relationship with the natural world as relayed in literary texts.
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    Radical platforms: autonomism, globalisation and networks
    Fordyce, Robert David Ewan ( 2016)
    This thesis engages in the work of Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri as well as others in the post-autonomist Italian Marxist tradition to critique the concept of Empire and to identify serious flaws in cryptolibertarian approaches to replacing the state with computational apparatuses. Hardt and Negri’s work proposes the existence of an international, multi-layered political structure called Empire, with a corresponding international working class called the ‘multitude’ which has been subsumed within this new global political system. The main thrust of the thesis identifies that media is underanalysed in Hardt and Negri’s work, yet there is great scope for networked media to be included as not just a component to Empire, but as constitutive of Empire’s existence. Thus the argument is that Empire is reliant on media, and would not survive without it. From this perspective, the acts of loose groups and fraternities, such as IP pirates, cryptolibertarians and cryptofascists, and anti-state groups of other sorts, to engineer software solutions to replace the state are problematic. Examples such as 3D printing, bitcoin, Wikileaks, and State-In-A-Box suggest that cryptolibertarian and related ideologies of technological solutions not only tend to be misguided, they reproduce the nature of Empire in an intensified manner. The argument of this thesis is thus that technological solutions that seek to replace the state with mediated software protocols will likely tend to simply reproduce structures of governance that are more rigid, and have less capacity for social intervention than the current structures of governance. This argument does not preclude technological methods as integral to political solutions in the future, but certainly questions those approaches that conceive of society as a set of problems to be solved.
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    Translating chaos: the modern purification of materiality and ideology
    Druitt, Fiona Marie ( 2017)
    Complexity theory’s philosophical interpretation of the mathematical phenomenon of chaos has been taken up across various humanities fields. However, this interdisciplinary translation fails to hold the two cultures (science and the humanities) and their histories of the present together and apart coherently. Complexity theory has an obvious historical and mathematical problem, which mathematicians noticed, but which turns out to be a less obvious philosophical one. But mathematics also has a historical and philosophical problem with chaos, which turns out to be a mathematical one. This poses my research question: what is chaos? Why do these translations fail? Is there an interpretation through which I can understand the philosophy, history and mathematics of chaos? In order to solve this problem of translating chaos, I will argue that it is related to a broader problem that Bruno Latour calls ‘modern purification’: an operation that separates nature and culture – and the two cultures that will study them – into distinct domains. I will argue that purification operates by insisting that one of two purified questions is out of the question in modernity: either that of ‘materiality’ (embodying things) for the humanities – or ‘ideology’ (thinking thought) for science. My critique of modernity and the way it frames two distinct cultures contends that neither of these questions is or ever was an unquestionable foundation. This thesis will argue that if I study translations of modernity from each of the two cultures and their histories of the present, then I still perform modern translation and modern purification, but I can no longer believe that these operations ever really worked. If the two cultures have different foundations and questions of materiality and ideology, then the two cultures will therefore have different, but related, kinds of thought and things and histories of the present. This argument offers an explanation of how and why the two cultures mistranslate one another, but also how the questions of what they promise and reduce are related. It is therefore possible to show how the two cultures can be intertwined in a productive way. Analysing modern purification will enable me to explain why translations of chaos fail for both science and the humanities. This analysis offers an alternative explanation of what chaos is philosophically, historically and mathematically, why modern mathematics forgot chaos for sixty years, and why mathematicians have a theoretical problem of how to define it. Studying modern purification reveals why complexity theory’s translation of chaos – and, more broadly, the later material, speculative and posthuman ‘turns’– recuperate a vitalist materiality when modern mathematicians and the Newtonian history of classical natural philosophy had already realised that there is no such thing as modern mechanism. My critique of modern purification also entails a critique of Foucault’s poststructuralism and of science studies, which remember how modernity reimagines the concepts of time and ideology, but forget to ask how modernity reimagines the concepts of space and materiality. I will also connect my argument to Barad’s concept of ‘diffraction’ and Merleau-Ponty’s concept of ‘chiasm’ in order to demonstrate how the question of embodying the body in modern physics and the question of seeing the gaze in modern philosophy are related: neither of these two purified questions was ever out of the question.
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    Writing places: whiteness and the design of the built environment
    Chiodo, Louise Jane ( 2018)
    The design of the built environment affects people. In Australia, designed spaces reflect specific ideas about nationhood that do not represent the reality of a diverse population. Instead, a white national identity pervades with unresolved issues of land often at the heart of such identity narratives. Whiteness, understood as a specific power structure, operates through landscapes and architecture in explicit and implicit ways. Indigenous cultural identities are also present within and against all of these expressions of whiteness. Such tensions arise in the first instance due to manifestations of whiteness in designed spaces being situated in Indigenous lands and Country while colonial histories and their associated violence, both symbolic and literal, remain largely unacknowledged. This thesis uses a mixed methodology to investigate a range of spaces, including demarcated national spaces, memorial sites, and places of exhibition, through the lens of critical race and whiteness studies to reveal how these identity tensions occur. Though the Australian context is the main focus of the study, an initial look to how similar issues are playing out in the US highlights the existence of transnational whiteness and the nature of the newly-formed relationship between the two nations at the time of Australia’s Federation. It is argued that the complicated relationship between these cultural identities affects the way landscapes and architecture are experienced, whether this is realised on a conscious level or not. Further, by using critical and reflexive modes of engagement, designers can gain deeper insights into place, see and feel their position in relation to these identity tensions, and understand how power is operating through them. This examination of the way cultural identities such as whiteness and Indigeneity are expressed through the design of national, memorial and exhibition spaces, allows a way into thinking about how the same tensions and power dynamics may also be taking place in more everyday spaces.
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    When romance is dead: vampires in romance narratives for girls
    Tealby, Alison ( 2018)
    In this thesis, I examine how the archetype of the vampire in Western literature continues to evolve within contemporary Young Adult vampire romance narratives. Building on Auerbach’s contention that vampires mutate according to the social demands of their time, I argue that the late twentieth and early twenty-first century proliferation of romantic vampire figures in Young Adult narratives for girls is a response to cultural anxieties concerning rapidly changing societal expectations of femininity following second-wave feminist movements in the twentieth century. I study three contemporary vampire romance narratives, Whedon’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003), Meyer’s Twilight (2005-2008) and Mead’s Bloodlines (2011-2015). Through my analysis of these texts, I demonstrate different ways in which the romantic vampire archetype has responded to Western anxieties concerning contemporary femininity, and I argue that the romantic vampire continues to evolve, drawing on conventions that have been set up in preceding vampire romance narratives to address changing social environments. The creative component of this thesis is an opening extract of a Young Adult vampire romance narrative titled The Blood Pact. In this extract, I explore ways in which the romantic vampire archetype can continue to transform in response to contemporary cultural concerns.
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    Global positioning: international auctions and the development of the Western market for Chinese Contemporary art, 1998-2012
    Archer, Anita Sarah ( 2018)
    This thesis examines the role of international auction houses in developing a Western market for Chinese Contemporary art from 1998 to 2012. It highlights six art auction events as pivotal for the transmission of cultural and economic value from local contexts to global acceptance. This thesis underscores the agency of collectors, networked art mediators and auctions to influence market expansion in the West, thereby revealing auctions as creators and consecrators of symbolic and economic value of Chinese Contemporary art.