Beyond Survival: Finding Joy in Embodied Trans Rhetoric
Beyond Survival: Finding Joy in Embodied Trans Rhetoric
상세정보
- 자료유형
- 학위논문 서양
- 최종처리일시
- 20250211151451
- ISBN
- 9798382591919
- DDC
- 305
- 서명/저자
- Beyond Survival: Finding Joy in Embodied Trans Rhetoric
- 발행사항
- [Sl] : The University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024
- 발행사항
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2024
- 형태사항
- 108 p
- 주기사항
- Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-11, Section: A.
- 주기사항
- Advisor: Olson, Christa.
- 학위논문주기
- Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024.
- 초록/해제
- 요약This dissertation is about trans joy: the feeling of happiness and comfort that comes from embodying a gender identity that is protected, supported, and celebrated by others. I situate this joy in the context of the regulatory efforts of binary gender, which is itself an effect of European colonialism. My dissertation starts from the increasingly rampant demonization and criminalization of trans bodies and turns to the strategies used by trans people to realize an existence characterized by joy. Drawing on examples of embodied rhetorical practices such as pregnancy, management of body hair, and style of dress, I demonstrate material ways trans people disrupt the marginalizing mechanism that is the gender binary-at the same time subverting colonial gender ideologies. The dissertation argues that bodies are an ideal rhetorical tool for trans worldmaking, a project that creates the conditions necessary for the protection, support, and celebration of trans identities and experiences. Each case study is presented as a model for trans worldmaking that can be taken up and reproduced, circulating the subversive potential of trans bodies. I argue that not only is binary gender a colonial effect, but also that trans rhetoric has the potential to subvert and remake gender to be a category that enables joy rather than regulation. Trans worldmaking is one project of an embodied rhetoric that is especially powerful when it plays out visibly on a wide-reaching stage: when audiences resonate with a non-conforming embodied gender, they see that their own identity is possible-that, in fact, there is a world in which their identity can (and should) be protected, supported, and celebrated.
- 일반주제명
- Gender studies
- 일반주제명
- Rhetoric
- 키워드
- Anti-colonialism
- 키워드
- Trans rhetoric
- 키워드
- Worldmaking
- 기타저자
- The University of Wisconsin - Madison English
- 기본자료저록
- Dissertations Abstracts International. 85-11A.
- 전자적 위치 및 접속
- 로그인 후 원문을 볼 수 있습니다.
MARC
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■020 ▼a9798382591919
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■040 ▼aMiAaPQ▼cMiAaPQ
■0820 ▼a305
■1001 ▼aWarwood, James Dean.
■24510▼aBeyond Survival: Finding Joy in Embodied Trans Rhetoric
■260 ▼a[Sl]▼bThe University of Wisconsin - Madison▼c2024
■260 1▼aAnn Arbor▼bProQuest Dissertations & Theses▼c2024
■300 ▼a108 p
■500 ▼aSource: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-11, Section: A.
■500 ▼aAdvisor: Olson, Christa.
■5021 ▼aThesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024.
■520 ▼aThis dissertation is about trans joy: the feeling of happiness and comfort that comes from embodying a gender identity that is protected, supported, and celebrated by others. I situate this joy in the context of the regulatory efforts of binary gender, which is itself an effect of European colonialism. My dissertation starts from the increasingly rampant demonization and criminalization of trans bodies and turns to the strategies used by trans people to realize an existence characterized by joy. Drawing on examples of embodied rhetorical practices such as pregnancy, management of body hair, and style of dress, I demonstrate material ways trans people disrupt the marginalizing mechanism that is the gender binary-at the same time subverting colonial gender ideologies. The dissertation argues that bodies are an ideal rhetorical tool for trans worldmaking, a project that creates the conditions necessary for the protection, support, and celebration of trans identities and experiences. Each case study is presented as a model for trans worldmaking that can be taken up and reproduced, circulating the subversive potential of trans bodies. I argue that not only is binary gender a colonial effect, but also that trans rhetoric has the potential to subvert and remake gender to be a category that enables joy rather than regulation. Trans worldmaking is one project of an embodied rhetoric that is especially powerful when it plays out visibly on a wide-reaching stage: when audiences resonate with a non-conforming embodied gender, they see that their own identity is possible-that, in fact, there is a world in which their identity can (and should) be protected, supported, and celebrated.
■590 ▼aSchool code: 0262.
■650 4▼aGender studies
■650 4▼aRhetoric
■653 ▼aAnti-colonialism
■653 ▼aEmbodied rhetoric
■653 ▼aTrans rhetoric
■653 ▼aWorldmaking
■653 ▼aGender ideologies
■690 ▼a0681
■690 ▼a0733
■71020▼aThe University of Wisconsin - Madison▼bEnglish.
■7730 ▼tDissertations Abstracts International▼g85-11A.
■790 ▼a0262
■791 ▼aPh.D.
■792 ▼a2024
■793 ▼aEnglish
■85640▼uhttp://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T17161836▼nKERIS▼z이 자료의 원문은 한국교육학술정보원에서 제공합니다.


