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Foreign Bodies and Anti-Bodies: Queer Transformativity in Post-World War II Literature and Film

In this project, I examine a selection of literary and filmic texts produced between 1946 and 1995, a period I refer to as late modernism. I show how, in offering instances of bodily transformativity that we might call queer, these texts expose, rework, and offer alternatives to the epistemological frames which govern our understandings of bodies at large. Specifically, these texts make formal and theoretical critiques of dominant narrative form, and of normative vision indicating that mainstream post/modern Western culture largely grasps the body not through biological data, but through the systems that govern textual comprehension. Taken together, these works represent a movement in late modernist textual production, one that takes bodily transformativity as a site for exploring the dominant standards that shape what we simplistically term the body.
While these works are distinguished by how they indicate that classical narrative form and normative vision affect understandings of bodies, they bring an unprecedented focus to this relationship. First and foremost, they show how these paradigms inform and are further perpetuated by developmentalism the turn-of-the-century discourse of human growth that posits as universal, transhistorical, and inevitable processes including puberty, adolescence, and reproductivity. The works I treat here pointedly take developmentalism as a plot that effects either the validation or pathologization of bodies that conform to or run afoul of it. I thus trace both developmentalisms late modernist life, and how literature and film have been formulated in response to, and formulated queer responses to, this paradigm.
Queer bodily transformativity is a concept I explore in order to show the contingency of bodily phenomena, their lack of intrinsic value: when they confirm the established limits for the human body, and the narrative means through which we know that body, they go unnoticed. Only when they begin pushing against those limits and means do they gain traction. Intervening at this juncture, I argue, allows us to see the cultural work that late modernist literary and filmic representations of bodily changeability can do and for what ends.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VANDERBILT/oai:VANDERBILTETD:etd-07252008-122655
Date04 August 2008
CreatorsSeymour, Nicole
ContributorsCarolyn Dever, Paul Young, Dana Nelson, Judith Halberstam
PublisherVANDERBILT
Source SetsVanderbilt University Theses
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-07252008-122655/
Rightsrestricted, I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached hereto a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to Vanderbilt University or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.

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