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Since the mid-1970s, punk has operated to fulfill the postmodern objective to destabilize and disrupt metanarratives. In the early days of punk, US and UK punks used their Do It Yourself (DIY) aesthetic and ethos to counter the aggressive capitalist takeover of music and media. With its roots in anarchism,

Since the mid-1970s, punk has operated to fulfill the postmodern objective to destabilize and disrupt metanarratives. In the early days of punk, US and UK punks used their Do It Yourself (DIY) aesthetic and ethos to counter the aggressive capitalist takeover of music and media. With its roots in anarchism, egalitarianism, and individuality, punk’s philosophical and ideological base, methods for pushing boundaries, and monstrous aesthetics have made a lasting impression that can be clearly identified in many of the social justice movements of the past 40 years. This project examines punk publics and publishing praxes and argues that marginalized groups utilize punk’s disruptive strategies to disseminate culture beyond the boundaries of hegemonic systems of knowledge production. This dissertation focuses on punk not as a counterpublic but as what I call a parapublic due to its position alongside the dominant culture. As punk’s recognizable signifiers continue to be absorbed into and consumed by capitalism, these signifiers become part of the mainstream, leading to a reconfiguration of punk. The reconfigurations signal a shift in the dominant culture because punk seeks to make itself abject to appear monstrous. We can look at the abject as occupying a position between the subject and the object, and then we can see that punk allows us to examine culture’s fears and desires through the embodiment of its monsters. This project centralizes the figure and the function of the monster within the works and publishing practices of zines and the punk authors Dennis Cooper and Kathy Acker.
ContributorsHorton, Joshua T (Author) / Horan, Elizabeth (Thesis advisor) / Gilfillan, Daniel (Thesis advisor) / Holbo, Christine (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Modern and contemporary African American writers employ science fiction in order to recast ideas on past, present, and future black culture. This dissertation examines Afrofuturism’s cultural aesthetics, which appropriate devices from science fiction and fantasy in order to revise, interrogate, and re-examine historical events insufficiently treated by literary realism. The

Modern and contemporary African American writers employ science fiction in order to recast ideas on past, present, and future black culture. This dissertation examines Afrofuturism’s cultural aesthetics, which appropriate devices from science fiction and fantasy in order to revise, interrogate, and re-examine historical events insufficiently treated by literary realism. The dissertation includes treatments of George Schuyler, Ishmael Reed, Octavia Butler, Colson Whitehead, Nalo Hopkinson, and Chicana/ofuturism.

The original contribution of this research is to highlight how imagination of a posthuman world has made it possible for African American writers to envision how racial power can be re-configured and re-negotiated. Focusing on shifting racial dynamics caught up in the swirl of technological changes, this research illuminates a complex process of literary production in which black culture and identity have been continuously re-interpreted.

In the post-war and post-Civil Rights Movement eras African American writers began reflecting on shifting racial dynamics in light of technological changes. This shift in which black experience became mechanized and digitized explains how technology became a source of new African American fiction. The relationships between humans and their external conditions appear in such futuristic themes as trans-human anamorphosis, cyberspace, and digital souls. These thematic devices, which explore humanity outside its phenotypic boundaries, provide African American writers with tools to demystify deterministic views of race. Afrofuturism has responded to the conceptual transformation of humanity with a race-specific scope, locating the presence of black culture in a high-tech world.

Techno-scientific progress has provided important resources in contemporary theory, yet these theoretical foci too seldom have been drawn into critical race discourses. This discrepancy is due to techno-scientific progress having served as a tool for the legitimation of scientific racism under global capitalism for centuries. Responding to this critical lacuna, the dissertation highlights an under-explored field in which African American literature responds to techno-culture’s involvement in contemporary discussions of race. Rather than repeat nominal assumptions of Eurocentric modernity and its racist hegemony, this dissertation theorizes how modern techno-culture’s outcomes—such as information science, genetic engineering, and computer science—shape minority lives, and how minority groups appropriate these outcomes to enact their own liberation.
ContributorsKim, Myungsung (Author) / Lockard, Joe (Thesis advisor) / Lester, Neal (Committee member) / Holbo, Christine (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
At the turn of the twentieth century, the United States Midwest stood poised to lead the nation economically, politically, and ideologically. Its literary productions of this time open upon a landscape of seemingly endless possibilities and expansive futures. My project studies the ideological constitution of these possibilities, finding

At the turn of the twentieth century, the United States Midwest stood poised to lead the nation economically, politically, and ideologically. Its literary productions of this time open upon a landscape of seemingly endless possibilities and expansive futures. My project studies the ideological constitution of these possibilities, finding that they arise from the condition of unprecedented secularity which marked early twentieth-century U.S. modernity. I employ Charles Taylor’s definition of secularization as the shift to belief as possibility rather than assumption, in which new options for belief or unbelief expand like a spiritual nova. This definition makes visible in Midwest texts the different attempts protagonists make to achieve authenticity in a secular age that offers new options for living meaningfully. Like windows onto a figurative landscape, different texts reveal unique vantages as well as startling parallels. I examine the following text grouping, which underscores the heterogeneity of the Midwest: O. E. Rolvaag’s Giants in the Earth, Oscar Micheaux’s The Homesteader, Willa Cather’s My Antonia, Sinclair Lewis’s Main Street, and Black Elk and John Neihardt’s Black Elk Speaks. As rural texts, they collaboratively depict the rural Midwest as a region that is both heartland and subaltern, at once the center of the nation but also estranged from supposed loci of modernity. I argue that their peculiar searches for authenticity offer insight on modern selfhood in a secular age, which constitutes the meaning of the Midwest then and now.
ContributorsClare, Caroline (Author) / Holbo, Christine (Thesis advisor) / Sadowski-Smith, Claudia (Committee member) / Carlson, John (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021