Antibody // Traumatic Entanglement, Eco-Poethics, and Speculative Horror as Survivor Futurisms

dc.contributor.advisorFinlay, Triny
dc.contributor.advisorMartin, Randall
dc.contributor.authorSalazar, Rebecca
dc.date.accessioned2023-08-16T19:07:59Z
dc.date.available2023-08-16T19:07:59Z
dc.date.issued2021-08
dc.description.abstractThe speculative horror poems collected in Antibody trace the ecological and personal entanglements of sexual trauma and its myriad intersecting oppressions. The introductory section brings polyvocal queer attention to entanglement ontology, an ecocritical expansion of intersectional feminist theory. This approach roots all human and social issues in the urgent ecological crises of the Anthropocene; in a very literal sense, every social interaction is “always 100 percent nature and 100 percent nurture” (Fausto-Sterling qtd in Sullivan 24). The subsequent sections of poetry chart the dissolution of a sexually violated speaker entangled in the hegemonies that perpetuate the parallel harms of rape culture and ecological destruction. The essays accompanying each section of poems expand this narrative by interrogating three particular horrors of various traumatized ecosystems: INVASION, on the imbrication of sexual violence in literary communities and the silencing that countered the #MeToo movement in CanLit; HAUNTING, on the biologically interlocked oppressions that make the current world unsurvivable for sick and survivor bodies; and KINSICKNESS, on the disrupted relationality that characterizes both sexual and ecological traumas, and the rituals which may offer ways to heal broken relations. By attending to trauma on multiple scales through poetry, hybrid non-fiction, and feminist horror, Antibody proposes horror as a mode that radically refuses to erase the atrocities of the Anthropocene, while also acting as a form of speculative futurism that imagines alternate futures in which traumatized people and ecosystems can survive.
dc.description.copyright©Rebecca Salazar, 2021
dc.format.extentxi, 324
dc.format.mediumelectronic
dc.identifier.urihttps://unbscholar.lib.unb.ca/handle/1882/37300
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniversity of New Brunswick
dc.relationVanier Canada Graduate Scholarship
dc.relationDepartment of English - GTA/GRA
dc.rightshttp://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_f1cf
dc.subject.disciplineEnglish
dc.titleAntibody // Traumatic Entanglement, Eco-Poethics, and Speculative Horror as Survivor Futurisms
dc.typedoctoral thesis
oaire.license.conditionother
thesis.degree.disciplineEnglish
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of New Brunswick
thesis.degree.leveldoctorate
thesis.degree.namePh.D.

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