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Contracting Subjectivities: Que(e)ry...
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Capps, V. Hunter.
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Contracting Subjectivities: Que(e)rying Gesture, Affect, and Politics in French and AmericanAIDS Literature.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Contracting Subjectivities: Que(e)rying Gesture, Affect, and Politics in French and AmericanAIDS Literature./
作者:
Capps, V. Hunter.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2020,
面頁冊數:
210 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-12, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International81-12B.
標題:
Sexuality. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=27997173
ISBN:
9798641437798
Contracting Subjectivities: Que(e)rying Gesture, Affect, and Politics in French and AmericanAIDS Literature.
Capps, V. Hunter.
Contracting Subjectivities: Que(e)rying Gesture, Affect, and Politics in French and AmericanAIDS Literature.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2020 - 210 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-12, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--State University of New York at Buffalo, 2020.
In this study, I most broadly seek to examine what AIDS as a biomedical and sociopolitical crisis has meant for the institution of democracy, literature, and the project of queerness by looking through the specific lenses of gesture, affect, and politics. Through critical queer hermeneutics, I perform a comparative literary analysis of a selected body of AIDS writing from France and America. The secondary methodology I utilize is an experimental mimesis of (auto)fiction and (auto)theory that both primary and secondary queer writers under study here have explored in their projects as a means of cultivating their ideas. This project can overall also be classified as an affective arching gesture, a kind of bearing witness and a taking up of the queer political projects that many AIDS writers and activists began in response to their specific oppression.I first develop what I call Raw Writing, which simply defined is a genre or style of writing deployed by queer and seropositive individuals that utilized queer excess in the form of sex, the body, language, and drugs in order to both make intelligible new subjectivities brought about by HIV as well as to manifest or perform the very potentiality inherent to literature and the act of writing. Through my examination of raw writing, I begin my initial probing of exposure that begins with the rawness of literature that exposes readers to knowledge specifically about living with, suffering from, and dying from HIV. Then, I develop what I call Sera-positivity, which is a multi-layered, multi-valent sense of subjectivity that while predicated on a radical particularity/singularity can come to inherently represent a fluctuating democratic sense of universality yet one that does not seek to exercise exclusion and homogenization in its constitution. I also further develop risk of exposure as underlying this new mediation of sociality and citizenship so as to rethink freedom through "post-AIDS" queer democracy. Lastly, I develop a sense of intergenerational AIDS trauma by queering postmemory and examining queer gesture. In doing so, I develop the idea of reading as fucking by looking at parallels of risk, exposure, and contamination between HIV and knowledge itself. The act of reading and the act of sex, understood through a queer lens of gesture and genre, become blurred and offer a means to understand what AIDS trauma of the everyday actually was as well as how it has been transmitted over time. I also find that PrEP (Pre-exposure Prophylaxis) has provided gay men with an opportunity to simultaneously combat the epidemic, alleviate AIDS trauma, and still hold space for new sexual projects.Ultimately, I conclude that the AIDS crisis was a virally imbued, passive genocide that created irrevocable changes in history, democracy, and emerging LGBT literature. I also conclude that despite the ongoing political projects of queers that come in the form of this very study, the current unfolding of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic stands in as empirical evidence itself that the shifts brought about by HIV have yet to be fully realized or taken seriously in any arena. Moving forward during an age of COVID-19 all the while still trying to combat the HIV pandemic, I hold open the space of reading the dissertation as an act that will hopefully transmit the necessary knowledge to participate in abating these diseases as much as the social stigmatization that has come along with them.
ISBN: 9798641437798Subjects--Topical Terms:
816197
Sexuality.
Subjects--Index Terms:
American literature
Contracting Subjectivities: Que(e)rying Gesture, Affect, and Politics in French and AmericanAIDS Literature.
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In this study, I most broadly seek to examine what AIDS as a biomedical and sociopolitical crisis has meant for the institution of democracy, literature, and the project of queerness by looking through the specific lenses of gesture, affect, and politics. Through critical queer hermeneutics, I perform a comparative literary analysis of a selected body of AIDS writing from France and America. The secondary methodology I utilize is an experimental mimesis of (auto)fiction and (auto)theory that both primary and secondary queer writers under study here have explored in their projects as a means of cultivating their ideas. This project can overall also be classified as an affective arching gesture, a kind of bearing witness and a taking up of the queer political projects that many AIDS writers and activists began in response to their specific oppression.I first develop what I call Raw Writing, which simply defined is a genre or style of writing deployed by queer and seropositive individuals that utilized queer excess in the form of sex, the body, language, and drugs in order to both make intelligible new subjectivities brought about by HIV as well as to manifest or perform the very potentiality inherent to literature and the act of writing. Through my examination of raw writing, I begin my initial probing of exposure that begins with the rawness of literature that exposes readers to knowledge specifically about living with, suffering from, and dying from HIV. Then, I develop what I call Sera-positivity, which is a multi-layered, multi-valent sense of subjectivity that while predicated on a radical particularity/singularity can come to inherently represent a fluctuating democratic sense of universality yet one that does not seek to exercise exclusion and homogenization in its constitution. I also further develop risk of exposure as underlying this new mediation of sociality and citizenship so as to rethink freedom through "post-AIDS" queer democracy. Lastly, I develop a sense of intergenerational AIDS trauma by queering postmemory and examining queer gesture. In doing so, I develop the idea of reading as fucking by looking at parallels of risk, exposure, and contamination between HIV and knowledge itself. The act of reading and the act of sex, understood through a queer lens of gesture and genre, become blurred and offer a means to understand what AIDS trauma of the everyday actually was as well as how it has been transmitted over time. I also find that PrEP (Pre-exposure Prophylaxis) has provided gay men with an opportunity to simultaneously combat the epidemic, alleviate AIDS trauma, and still hold space for new sexual projects.Ultimately, I conclude that the AIDS crisis was a virally imbued, passive genocide that created irrevocable changes in history, democracy, and emerging LGBT literature. I also conclude that despite the ongoing political projects of queers that come in the form of this very study, the current unfolding of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic stands in as empirical evidence itself that the shifts brought about by HIV have yet to be fully realized or taken seriously in any arena. Moving forward during an age of COVID-19 all the while still trying to combat the HIV pandemic, I hold open the space of reading the dissertation as an act that will hopefully transmit the necessary knowledge to participate in abating these diseases as much as the social stigmatization that has come along with them.
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https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=27997173
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