A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext

A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext is a creative thesis that explores the radical potential of the biotext as a genre that defies formal and generic restrictions, especially the expectations of autobiography. Using postcolonial, affective, and literary deconstructionis...

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Main Author: Fernando, Tarini Nandita
Other Authors: Whitehead, Joshua, Dobson, Kit, Banerjee, Pallavi
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Arts 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1880/116799
https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/41641
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spelling ftunivcalgary:oai:prism.ucalgary.ca:1880/116799 2023-10-29T02:38:02+01:00 A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext Fernando, Tarini Nandita Whitehead, Joshua Dobson, Kit Banerjee, Pallavi 2023-07-19 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1880/116799 https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/41641 en eng Arts University of Calgary Fernando, T. N. (2023). A body of longing: the erotic and decolonial power of the biotext (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. https://hdl.handle.net/1880/116799 https://dx.doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/41641 University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. biotext literary deconstruction erotic concrete poetry contemporary Canadian literatures contemporary Indigenous Literatures BIPOC Sri Lanka postcolonial hybridity diaspora affect theory apocalypse poetry visual poetry diasporic Canadian literatures form and genre Education--Language and Literature Literature--Canadian (English) master thesis 2023 ftunivcalgary https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/41641 2023-10-01T17:43:05Z A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext is a creative thesis that explores the radical potential of the biotext as a genre that defies formal and generic restrictions, especially the expectations of autobiography. Using postcolonial, affective, and literary deconstructionist theories, I explore questions such as, how does the biotext challenge formal and generic categorization? What decolonial and feminist potentials lie in the rejection of literary categories by Black, Indigenous, and writers of colour in a settler-colonial state? I investigate these questions through close analyses of experimental biotextual writings in contemporary Canadian and Indigenous English-language literatures, such as Fred Wah’s Diamond Grill, Jordan Abel’s NISHGA, and, of course, my own biotextual poetry. Through my analyses, I find that the biotext, through its lack of strict generic and formal expectations, inherently encourages experimentation and the blurring of literary categories. This rejection of categorization is what allows BIPOC authors to resist readability by the Canadian state, which seeks to fetishize and restrict their stories within the colonial borders of the nation-state. In investigating the work of authors like Wah, I also theorize that one reason diasporic Asian-Canadian writers have been so foundational to the history of the biotext is that they are particularly well-positioned to use formal and generic experimentation to challenge constructions of home and identity. I also argue that visual experimentation is a key tool that heightens the decolonial breaking of generic and formal boundaries that I attempt in my poetry. Drawing strongly from Audre Lorde’s theory of the power of the erotic, my poetry collection takes up the genre of biotext and articulates my own vision for erotic, decolonial, Sri Lankan, feminist futures. Inspired by Abel’s oeuvre, M. NourbeSe Philip’s Zong!, and Joshua Whitehead’s full-metal Indigiqueer, my poetry makes intentional use of visual experimentation to ... Master Thesis Nishga PRISM - University of Calgary Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection PRISM - University of Calgary Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftunivcalgary
language English
topic biotext
literary deconstruction
erotic
concrete poetry
contemporary Canadian literatures
contemporary Indigenous Literatures
BIPOC
Sri Lanka
postcolonial
hybridity
diaspora
affect theory
apocalypse
poetry
visual poetry
diasporic Canadian literatures
form and genre
Education--Language and Literature
Literature--Canadian (English)
spellingShingle biotext
literary deconstruction
erotic
concrete poetry
contemporary Canadian literatures
contemporary Indigenous Literatures
BIPOC
Sri Lanka
postcolonial
hybridity
diaspora
affect theory
apocalypse
poetry
visual poetry
diasporic Canadian literatures
form and genre
Education--Language and Literature
Literature--Canadian (English)
Fernando, Tarini Nandita
A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext
topic_facet biotext
literary deconstruction
erotic
concrete poetry
contemporary Canadian literatures
contemporary Indigenous Literatures
BIPOC
Sri Lanka
postcolonial
hybridity
diaspora
affect theory
apocalypse
poetry
visual poetry
diasporic Canadian literatures
form and genre
Education--Language and Literature
Literature--Canadian (English)
description A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext is a creative thesis that explores the radical potential of the biotext as a genre that defies formal and generic restrictions, especially the expectations of autobiography. Using postcolonial, affective, and literary deconstructionist theories, I explore questions such as, how does the biotext challenge formal and generic categorization? What decolonial and feminist potentials lie in the rejection of literary categories by Black, Indigenous, and writers of colour in a settler-colonial state? I investigate these questions through close analyses of experimental biotextual writings in contemporary Canadian and Indigenous English-language literatures, such as Fred Wah’s Diamond Grill, Jordan Abel’s NISHGA, and, of course, my own biotextual poetry. Through my analyses, I find that the biotext, through its lack of strict generic and formal expectations, inherently encourages experimentation and the blurring of literary categories. This rejection of categorization is what allows BIPOC authors to resist readability by the Canadian state, which seeks to fetishize and restrict their stories within the colonial borders of the nation-state. In investigating the work of authors like Wah, I also theorize that one reason diasporic Asian-Canadian writers have been so foundational to the history of the biotext is that they are particularly well-positioned to use formal and generic experimentation to challenge constructions of home and identity. I also argue that visual experimentation is a key tool that heightens the decolonial breaking of generic and formal boundaries that I attempt in my poetry. Drawing strongly from Audre Lorde’s theory of the power of the erotic, my poetry collection takes up the genre of biotext and articulates my own vision for erotic, decolonial, Sri Lankan, feminist futures. Inspired by Abel’s oeuvre, M. NourbeSe Philip’s Zong!, and Joshua Whitehead’s full-metal Indigiqueer, my poetry makes intentional use of visual experimentation to ...
author2 Whitehead, Joshua
Dobson, Kit
Banerjee, Pallavi
format Master Thesis
author Fernando, Tarini Nandita
author_facet Fernando, Tarini Nandita
author_sort Fernando, Tarini Nandita
title A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext
title_short A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext
title_full A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext
title_fullStr A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext
title_full_unstemmed A Body of Longing: The Erotic and Decolonial Power of the Biotext
title_sort body of longing: the erotic and decolonial power of the biotext
publisher Arts
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/1880/116799
https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/41641
genre Nishga
genre_facet Nishga
op_relation Fernando, T. N. (2023). A body of longing: the erotic and decolonial power of the biotext (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca.
https://hdl.handle.net/1880/116799
https://dx.doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/41641
op_rights University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/41641
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