Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature

Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literatureexamines how relationality is encoded and portrayed in poetry, short stories, and novels by Anishinaabe and diasporic authors, Elizabeth Acevedo, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Gerald Vizenor, and Mohsin Hamid. Through engage...

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Main Author: Moradipour, Maral
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Scholarship@Western 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/7353
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/etd/article/9812/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf
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spelling ftunivwestonta:oai:ir.lib.uwo.ca:etd-9812 2023-10-01T03:50:19+02:00 Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature Moradipour, Maral 2020-10-02T20:00:00Z application/pdf https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/7353 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/etd/article/9812/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf English eng Scholarship@Western https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/7353 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/etd/article/9812/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository text 2020 ftunivwestonta 2023-09-03T07:34:15Z Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literatureexamines how relationality is encoded and portrayed in poetry, short stories, and novels by Anishinaabe and diasporic authors, Elizabeth Acevedo, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Gerald Vizenor, and Mohsin Hamid. Through engagement with select works by these writers, the thesis contributes to critical discussion about relationality, a concept that posits that all existence is relational and asserts that no human being is outside this state of being. A generative, complex concept for analyzing responses to displacement and dispossession, critiques of power, and visions of just and balanced co-existence, relationality provides a useful analytic lens through which to consider and assess literary frameworks for imagining connections between Indigenous and racialized diasporic communities. Through close readings of Beastgirl and Other Origin Myths(Acevedo), “nogojiwanong” (Simpson), Hiroshima Bugi: Atomu 57(Vizenor), and Exit West(Hamid), I analyze the significance of two pivotal themes for unfolding relationality’s potential: (i) the concept of decolonial love and (ii) the concept of constellations, as conveyed in the representation of land and stars. The first section examines the relational aspects of decolonial love as taken up in works by Black Dominican-American poet Elizabeth Acevedo and Anishinaabe writer Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. Through engagement with these works, the thesis demonstrates how decolonial love might conjure attraction, intimacy and care, which colonialism, white supremacy, heteropatriarchy, and capitalism have damaged. The second section explores the significance of stars and constellations for unfolding relationality in novels by Anishinaabe theorist, Gerald Vizenor and Pakistani-British writer, Mohsin Hamid. This section illuminates the innovative ways that these writers draw on star knowledge to produce cross-hemispheric novels and reveals their insightful strategies for grappling with rootedness, migration, ... Text anishina* The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western Bugi ENVELOPE(147.572,147.572,59.465,59.465)
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collection The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western
op_collection_id ftunivwestonta
language English
description Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literatureexamines how relationality is encoded and portrayed in poetry, short stories, and novels by Anishinaabe and diasporic authors, Elizabeth Acevedo, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Gerald Vizenor, and Mohsin Hamid. Through engagement with select works by these writers, the thesis contributes to critical discussion about relationality, a concept that posits that all existence is relational and asserts that no human being is outside this state of being. A generative, complex concept for analyzing responses to displacement and dispossession, critiques of power, and visions of just and balanced co-existence, relationality provides a useful analytic lens through which to consider and assess literary frameworks for imagining connections between Indigenous and racialized diasporic communities. Through close readings of Beastgirl and Other Origin Myths(Acevedo), “nogojiwanong” (Simpson), Hiroshima Bugi: Atomu 57(Vizenor), and Exit West(Hamid), I analyze the significance of two pivotal themes for unfolding relationality’s potential: (i) the concept of decolonial love and (ii) the concept of constellations, as conveyed in the representation of land and stars. The first section examines the relational aspects of decolonial love as taken up in works by Black Dominican-American poet Elizabeth Acevedo and Anishinaabe writer Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. Through engagement with these works, the thesis demonstrates how decolonial love might conjure attraction, intimacy and care, which colonialism, white supremacy, heteropatriarchy, and capitalism have damaged. The second section explores the significance of stars and constellations for unfolding relationality in novels by Anishinaabe theorist, Gerald Vizenor and Pakistani-British writer, Mohsin Hamid. This section illuminates the innovative ways that these writers draw on star knowledge to produce cross-hemispheric novels and reveals their insightful strategies for grappling with rootedness, migration, ...
format Text
author Moradipour, Maral
spellingShingle Moradipour, Maral
Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature
author_facet Moradipour, Maral
author_sort Moradipour, Maral
title Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature
title_short Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature
title_full Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature
title_fullStr Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature
title_full_unstemmed Land, Water, and Stars: Relationality in Anishinaabe and Diasporic Literature
title_sort land, water, and stars: relationality in anishinaabe and diasporic literature
publisher Scholarship@Western
publishDate 2020
url https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/7353
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/etd/article/9812/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(147.572,147.572,59.465,59.465)
geographic Bugi
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genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_source Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
op_relation https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/7353
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/etd/article/9812/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf
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