School of Culture and Communication - Theses

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    Extreme males: autistic masculinity in three bestsellers
    Kelly, Peter ( 2015)
    Inspired by Simon Baron-Cohen’s theory that autism can be understood as an extreme version of typical male behaviour, this thesis will examine whether this view is reflected in the representation of autistic males in best-selling fiction (“Extreme Male Brain” 248). It will investigate autism representations in the context of hegemonic masculinity, by comparing the behaviour of Christopher Boone from The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Jacob Hunt from House Rules, and Don Tillman from The Rosie Project to Linda Lindsey’s masculinity norms. These include anti-femininity, emotional reticence, success, intelligence, toughness, aggressiveness and an obsessive heterosexuality (Lindsey 241-7). While Christopher's surprising violence, extreme intelligence, insensitivity and stubbornness are masculine traits, his asexuality disqualifies him from being an extreme male. Jacob’s masculinity is shown in his aggressiveness, intellect and physique, but is undermined by his ambiguous sexuality and patchy career history. Don’s physical appearance, heterosexuality, stoic attitude and intellect are all masculine qualities, unlike his need for social guidance and apparent virginity at the novel’s beginning. All three characters are white and compensate for a lack of emotional awareness with hyper-rationality. Their paradoxical masculinity may account for their novels’ success. This thesis finds that these three fictional autistics are not extreme males by the standards of hegemonic masculinity.
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    Writing DNA: why does the human animal write creatively?
    Smithies, Lisa ( 2018)
    This thesis argues that creative writing is a form of play that uses cognitive patterns of information. It begins with a collection of short fiction, titled Small Science, loosely based around scientific themes, particularly the ways in which biology is a ubiquitous, yet often ignored, force in our lives. The work of this collection prompts the dissertation that follows, namely the question: Why would an animal write creatively? The theoretical dissertation draws on theories of cognition to enhance close analytical readings of short fiction by two seminal writers. Firstly, analysis of Vladimir Nabokov's "Signs and Symbols" (1958) foregrounds three key components of the thesis-pattern seeking, cognition, and play. Works by Lydia Davis are then examined in light of particular cognitive aspects of the creative writing process. The simple complexities of "Hand" (2007b) and "Double Negative" (2001a) illustrate how Davis's highly compressed forms both exploit and illuminate our innate cognitive processing capabilities. "Happiest Moment" (2001b) explores notions of compression and expansion, and how the mind may deal with literary ambiguities. Then, analysis of "Grammar Questions" (2007a) investigates the role of cognitive play in the creative writing process. Finally, the thesis concludes by returning to the initial biologically-based question to re-examine how the theoretical discussion impacts a practice-led creative writing thesis.
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    Fauna Fiction: 'Interspecies Communication in Contemporary Literature' and 'The Animals in That Country'
    McKay, Laura Jean ( 2017)
    Instances of interspecies communication and miscommunication occur in almost every interaction humans have with other animals. Nonetheless, discussions of nonhuman animals as communicative subjects are often relegated to interspecies language experiments and children’s fiction. This thesis makes an original contribution by exploring representations of interspecies communication in contemporary adult fiction, which I call ‘fauna fiction’. In the critical component I analyse in some detail what is occurring in novelistic accounts of human-nonhuman animal encounters. I focus on six contemporary fauna fictions: The Conversations of Cow (1985) by Suniti Namjoshi, The Evolution of Bruno Littlemore (2011) by Benjamin Hale, Wish (1995) by Peter Goldsworthy, A Beautiful Truth (2013) by Colin McAdam, Bear (1976) by Marian Engel and Dog Boy (2009) by Eva Hornung. In these texts, the meeting point of attempted contact between species is framed theoretically by three key concepts: the ‘speaking meat’ (as conceptualised by ecofeminist philosopher Val Plumwood), the ‘species boundary’, and ‘language primacy’. I argue that what I call ‘agency-centred models’ of literary animal studies – in which nonhuman animals are considered as responding beings – provide a relevant theoretical base from which to study interspecies communication in fauna fiction. In order to draw out these ideas, I ask: how we might read these novels as disruptive speculations upon a perceived species divide between human and nonhuman animals? I argue that fauna fiction contains subversive sexual and violent subtexts of nonhuman animal resistance. Through this lens, the nonhuman animal protagonist is no longer an allegory or stand-in for human meaning in fiction, but a destabilising, transgressive and resistant figure. The creative component consists of a novel extract, The Animals in That Country. The novel is an apocalyptic literary fiction that provides new insights by exploring communicative human-nonhuman animal relationships. The story follows Jean, a fifty-one-year-old Australian zoo guide, into a world where humans can understand other animals. Through shared communication the human characters in this novel are able to put words to their complex relationships with other animals. They are also confronted with their own animality, a reality for which the language barrier usually provides a convenient shield. Conversations between species forge new connections. The novel also engages with issues of intersubjectivity, power and violence, resulting in dystopian outcomes. As the narrative develops, a dingo character called Sue becomes increasingly important to Jean, and eventually takes charge of Jean’s life. Through this process, dingo speech is prioritised. In The Animals in That Country, the overwhelming responsibility that comes with sudden shared communication with other creatures is sometimes offset by the thrill of insight into previously incomprehensible minds.
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    This loved philology
    Mulhall, Maya ( 2017)
    ‘This Loved Philology’ re-examines the notion of philology as a term meaning ‘love of language’. This thesis juxtaposes the key practice of slow reading against secondary literary and language theory, and against creative texts by writers such as Emily Dickinson, Virginia Woolf, and Miguel de Cervantes. The Creative Component is an excerpt from the novel The Adventures of Mr Cock. The novel is a work of fiction, following the protagonist Win as he moves through the failure of his romantic relationship, emphasising motifs of attempted expression, mutable identity, and desire. Throughout, this thesis argues for a reframing of philology as a process of non-linear reading that traces inter-relationships, allusions and tensions between and across creative and theoretical texts.
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    Female desire and agency in selected short stories by Lorrie Moore & Thrill: short stories
    Barber, Emily Rose ( 2016)
    This dissertation employs Simone de Beauvoir’s and Jessica Benjamin’s theories of female subjectivity to perform a gynocritical feminist exploration of women’s desire and agency as depicted in selected short stories by Lorrie Moore. Examining Moore’s short stories ‘You’re Ugly, Too’ (Like Life 67–91), ‘Willing’ (Birds of America 5–25), ‘Two Boys’ (Like Life 3–19) and ‘Amahl and the Night Visitors: A Guide to the Tenor of Love’ (Self-Help 97–116), the thesis aims to discuss the ways in which Moore’s stories call into question both the objectification of women under patriarchy, and the impact that this objectification has on female subjectivity, desire and agency. It is my hypothesis that, key to Moore’s critique of the objectification of women, is the portrayal in her short fiction of straight women whose complex romantic and sexual encounters with men compromise their sense of themselves as subjects capable of desire and agency. My research attempts to show that Moore’s stories comment on the often-compromised desire and agency of women under patriarchy, and can be considered creative solutions to the question of how short fiction might function to broach the complexities of female subjectivity. The creative component of the dissertation, Thrill, comprises seventeen short stories that explore female desire and agency. Thrill responds to Moore’s work, and to the thinking of Beauvoir and Benjamin, by depicting young heterosexual women grappling with issues of desire, agency, and subjectivity. These stories hinge on the idea that female subjectivity is controlled and negated by a patriarchal sexual politics which is at its most potent in the interpersonal sexual arena.
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    How can we lose when we're so sincere?: A study of sincerity in autobiographical comics
    Brialey, Leonie ( 2016)
    In the last twenty to thirty years there has been an increased emphasis on sincerity, in both critical writing and art practices across a variety of media. This thesis looks at how this emphasis on sincerity can be seen manifesting in autobiographical comics. Critical writing on autobiographical comics has tended to focus on authenticity or irony, and this thesis seeks to find out how sincerity is related to or differs from authenticity and irony in tone and register. It looks at how sincerity in autobiographic truth telling manifests in openness and intimacy, in a kinder, gentler tone (than irony or authenticity) and in providing comfort through both language and gesture; through not only the cartoonist’s words but through the cartoonist’s hand, and handwriting, on the comics page. The creative component of this thesis, Raw Feels, is a practical inquiry into how sincerity is written and drawn into autobiographical comics, and our lives in general. Being sincere can include being ironic and serious at the same time; Raw Feels attempts to inhabit this space and to take conventions of comics (such as the thought balloon) as seriously as possible in order to work through new ways of thinking about thinking and our bodies.
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    Beneath the Long White Cloud: settler Chinese women's storytelling in Aotearoa New Zealand
    Yee, Grace ( 2016)
    This thesis analyses settler Chinese women’s storytelling in Aotearoa New Zealand in order to articulate a conception of autonomous subjectivity within the context of hegemonic Colonialist Orientalist narratives. Utilising a bricolage methodology that combines the researcher’s creative writing with critical analyses of spoken and written stories, including interviews with authors, it focuses on Chinese women’s lived experiences and the narrative strategies they deploy. The prolonged absence of the feminine voice is barely acknowledged in extant studies of the settler Chinese community in New Zealand. Chinese women’s stories did not emerge in the public domain until the 1990s. While increased recognition of this writing appears to point to the country’s progress, Colonialist Orientalist narratives have continued to characterise Chinese women as either exotic and Oriental or assimilated and invisible, subordinating them in accord with a an enduring prototype: ‘Chinese woman’. I contend that the insidiousness of this prototype is reflected in its integration into settler Chinese women’s subjectivities, and in the stories they tell: both ‘inside’ the Chinese community, and ‘outside’ in the Pākehā mainstream. As such, it appears that there exists no space within which these women can express an autonomous subjectivity and thereby assert a ‘separate’ identity. This thesis is concerned with identifying such a space. Framed by key premises drawn from Judith Butler’s critical analysis of subjection, and with reference to Rey Chow’s analysis of Chinese woman’s subjectivity, Linda Alcoff’s positional feminism, Erving Goffman’s dramaturgical schema and Mary Ann Doane’s theory of femininity as ‘masquerade’, this research analyses the stories that settler Chinese women have told in diverse contexts including personal interviews and in their published writing. In these analyses, in which I conceive of storytelling as performance, I identify a range of narrative strategies through which autonomous subjectivities may be articulated and validated, and which have the potential to ground claims for previously unrecognised subject positions. The more explicitly imaginative creative writing in this thesis is also interrogative, and as such, has more than adjunctive value to the (more overtly) critical discussion. Chapter Five demonstrates a range of counterhegemonic narrative strategies in its juxtaposition of multiple genres including fictionalised autobiography, poetry, images and excerpts from mainstream New Zealand newspapers. Creative writing is also utilised to articulate an intimate conversation among Chinese women in Chapter Two, and in the autoethnographic narrative threads integrated into the critical discussion in most of the other chapters. The incorporation of this creative writing into the body of the thesis is intended to demonstrate that the language of traditional academic discourse alone is inadequate for the task of illuminating settler Chinese women’s subjectivity. It also reveals how the autonomy and agency of this Chinese woman writer – in the capacity of researcher – may be grounded in the transformation of the very language that has produced her as ‘Chinese woman’. 
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    'Fleischgeist': subversive tropes of the flesh of 'Woman' and 'Animal' in selected novels by Angela Carter, Marie Darrieussecq and Deborah Levy
    Singer, Hayley ( 2016)
    This dissertation offers an ecofeminist exploration of subversive tropes of the flesh in selected novels by Angela Carter, Marie Darrieussecq and Deborah Levy. The aim of this investigation is to discover how patriarchal and carnivorous ideologies can be disrupted through novelistic narrative, which incorporates particular tropes of ‘Woman’ and ‘Animal’. My hypothesis is that subversive tropes of the flesh portrayed in selected novels by Carter, Darrieussecq and Levy trouble the deadly authority of Western culture’s carnophallogocentric logic. That is, the logic underpinning material-semiotic practices that reduce women and nonhuman animals to objects of consumption. My research shows that subversive tropes of the flesh inform a specific narrative strategy found in all three novels examined: a subversive, double-voiced mimicry. It is my contention that Carter, Darrieussecq and Levy apply this form of parodic mimicry to trouble old narratives in new political ways. This study uses theoretical frameworks developed by Luce Irigaray, Mikhaïl Bakhtin, Julia Kristeva, Mary Russo, Susan Rubin Suleiman, Jacques Derrida, Linda Hutcheon and Matthew Calarco to explore how Carter, Darrieussecq and Levy portray sexist and speciest violence while foregrounding an ethical feminist allegiance to an embodied, relational and contingent aesthetic. Moreover, I consider the way this aesthetic collapses species boundaries by depicting meat as a substance of exposed embodiment and suffering shared by humans and other animals. I conclude this study by suggesting that the narrative experimentations developed by Carter, Darrieussecq and Levy jam the discursive functioning of the carnophallogocentric machine and offer new narrative models for writing beyond the ‘Fleischgeist’. Sleeper, a novella, engages the subversive tropes and narrative techniques examined in my literary-cultural analysis. Sleeper uses the language of carnophallogocentric oppression to stir up practices and politics of gender inequality in an Australian suburban setting. The narrator, Anna, plunges into a world where reality, dreams and hallucinations intermingle to form a landscape of actual and imagined human-animal death. Anna’s fictionalised world takes aim at the so-called authority of carnophallogocentrism.
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    We have voices, too: literacy, alternative modernities, and Indonesian domestic workers in Hong Kong
    Retnaningdyah, Pratiwi ( 2015)
    Migrant domestic workers are arguably one of the most exploited and subordinated groups of women in the international division of labour under global capitalism. However, they are active in negotiating the prevailing power structures in the transnational labour market. My thesis examines the significance of literacy practices to the cultural and subjective experience of Indonesian Domestic Workers (IDWs) in Hong Kong. Using three sites of culture as case studies—the Forum Lingkar Pena Hong Kong (Pen Circle Forum, FLP-HK) writing community, IDWs’ blogging community, and the practice of suitcase libraries—I argue that IDWs actively exercise agency by engaging in literacy practices, which embody various forms of self-modernisation. Through extensive ethnography and textual analysis of IDWs’ writings, the study reveals that IDWs in the FLP-HK writing community define their own meaning of Islamic modernity by writing to maintain and develop self-reflexive and spiritual interiority. Meanwhile, IDW bloggers are engaged in digital literacy practices that consciously challenge the stereotypes of stupid and uneducated maids and create new images of smart and technologically literate women. Furthermore, their engagement in ICTs—a key element of modernity—for social and political activism enables their elaboration of and participation in an alternative public sphere. Finally, IDWs’ suitcase library practices aimed at fostering reading practices carry the literacy mission as another element of modernity. More importantly, suitcase libraries serve as literacy hubs in which the various forms of IDWs’ literacy practices converge, and thus facilitate IDWs’ participation in an alternative public sphere, in which IDWs create forums of literacy-related public discussions. The above three sites of culture and the elements of modernity they negotiate are the manifestations of IDWs’ definitions of their own meanings of modernity.
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    The politics of empowerment: young adult literature, heterotopia and the possibility of social change
    Wilkinson, Lili Mei-Ling ( 2015)
    Critical component Young Adult (YA) literature features adolescent protagonists challenging dominant power structures in order to experience transformation and development – the postmodern entwicklungsroman. This thesis will deploy Foucault’s theory of heterotopia to locate spaces that are empowering not only for the adolescents within a fictional text, but also for teen readers. An analysis of Janet Tashjian’s Vote for Larry, David Levithan’s Wide Awake and Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother reveals a seemingly unavoidable ideological didacticism that closes down possibilities for seeing the world differently. Although Meg Cabot’s chick-lit series The Princess Diaries and All American Girl are more successful in achieving a politically transgressive approach, they also ultimately succumb to ideological dogma, failing to open up a dialectical space between author and reader. Although similarly didactic, JK Rowling’s Harry Potter novels contain an incompatible jumble of ideology that prevents the reader from being forced into a closed utopian locus. This contradictory space allows readers to narrate their own ideologies through fan fiction, within the fictional world but outside of the original text. In the case of the Harry Potter Alliance, the fan-space opens up into an alternative pathway to activism – creating transformative and empowering possibilities for young readers. This marriage of fiction, fandom and activism is further explored in an analysis of John Green’s Paper Towns, and the Nerdfighters community. Unlike Rowling, Green is an active participant in this online community, consciously destabilising the author/reader binary and encouraging a cultural hybridity that opens up new possibilities for social organising and activism. The YA heterotopia creates not only new pathways to resistance, transformation and social change, but also offers radical new possibilities for fiction in the space revealed between author, text and reader. Creative component Green Valentine is a YA novel that blends romance, humour, environmentalism, community and social change. The emotional development of protagonist Astrid reflects the procession of arguments in the critical work. Astrid is passionate about politics and environmentalism, but is trapped by her own didactic ideology. After experiencing the transformational power of heterotopian space – a guerilla garden – she learns to see her drab suburb of Valentine differently, empowering her to resist the cultural hegemony of her world and become a catalyst for social change. It is in the alternative space of the garden that Astrid begins to see the world differently – her growth and transformation mirroring the organic metamorphosis of ugly, concrete Valentine into an oasis of subversive greenery. Astrid’s Victory Garden enables her to imagine new ways of thinking and being, beyond the fixed dystopia of present-Valentine, or the stark utopian vision of Mayor Tanaka’s future-Valentine. Astrid gains an understanding of the multitude – realising the futility of trying to impose her own ideological dogma upon others, and instead embracing the rhizomatic power of individual subjectivities united in alternative spaces. By allowing the unpredictability of the wilderness into the static rigidity of Valentine, a heterotopian space opens up that transforms not only Astrid, but the entire Valentine community, empowering them to resist, subvert and bring about social change.