AbstractsLanguage, Literature & Linguistics

Narrative salvage

by -6084-8519




Institution: University of Texas – Austin
Department:
Year: 2016
Keywords: Waste; Literature; Repurposing; Environment; Place; Material; Queer studies; Women authors; Contemporary literature; Documentary; Environmental criticism; Wastescapes; Arctic; Great Basin; Gulf Coast; Junkyards
Posted: 02/05/2017
Record ID: 2064810
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/2152/40321


Abstract

Narrative Salvage brings together contemporary writing and film of what I call wastescapes: places made expendable—wasted—under late capitalism. In hybrid works of the 2000s by Bonnie Jo Campbell, Agnes Varda, Natasha Trethewey, Brenda Longfellow, Rebecca Solnit, Claire Vaye Watkins, and Eileen Myles, I analyze tactile and emotional representations of everyday life in the wastescape. Each of the four chapters examines a particular wastescape featured by these writers and filmmakers: the postindustrial junkyard, the oil-slicked Gulf Coast, the nuclear waste strewn Nevada desert, and the melting Arctic tundra. Within these spaces, I track practices of repurposing that occur in the inhabitants’ everyday lives and analyze the potential for writing and film to reclaim and transform place through representation. I argue that waste is a crucial site of trans-corporeal experience, which in Stacy Alaimo's words constitutes a 'literal contact zone between human corporeality and more-than-human nature.' The trans-corporeal wastescape affects ecosystems, human communities, and material objects; however, the representation of waste has not been a primary focus in environmental criticism. Narrative Salvage addresses this gap by approaching waste interdisciplinarily, drawing on the critical tools of environmental studies, sociology, and material culture studies. Practices of repurposing in the works I study dismantle the ideologies that create wastescapes by calling into question the production of value and rejection of waste that undergird capitalist and patriarchal enterprise. In the deviant ethics of the wastescape, the telos of progress loses its hold, making way for makeshift epistemologies and queer temporalities of continuous making do and regeneration. These experimental contemporary works' alinear, fragmented, and polyvocal forms embrace the vital ongoingness of decay and contamination. In Narrative Salvage, adamantly personal literatures and films of the wastescape urge audiences to rethink waste by seeing it anew, by defamiliarizing it, and in so doing help to rethink the human's relationship to—immersion within—place and environment. Advisors/Committee Members: Houser, Heather (advisor), Cvetkovich, Ann, 1957- (advisor), Cullingford, Elizabeth (committee member), Bennett, Chad (committee member), Lewis, Randolph (committee member).