소장자료
LDR | 04822nam 2200517 4500 | ||
001 | 0100803819▲ | ||
005 | 20240329140819▲ | ||
006 | m o d ▲ | ||
007 | cr#unu||||||||▲ | ||
008 | 240116s2023 us |||||||||||||||c||eng d▲ | ||
020 | ▼a9798380596305▲ | ||
035 | ▼a(MiAaPQ)AAI30788424▲ | ||
040 | ▼aMiAaPQ▼cMiAaPQ▲ | ||
082 | 0 | ▼a305▲ | |
100 | 1 | ▼aRitter, Katherine.▲ | |
245 | 1 | 0 | ▼aGreetings From the Anthropocene: Queer Ecologies of Asbury Park, New Jersey▼h[electronic resource]▲ |
260 | ▼a[S.l.]: ▼bThe Ohio State University. ▼c2023▲ | ||
260 | 1 | ▼aAnn Arbor : ▼bProQuest Dissertations & Theses, ▼c2023▲ | |
300 | ▼a1 online resource(236 p.)▲ | ||
500 | ▼aSource: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-04, Section: B.▲ | ||
500 | ▼aAdvisor: Winnubst, Shannon.▲ | ||
502 | 1 | ▼aThesis (Ph.D.)--The Ohio State University, 2023.▲ | |
506 | ▼aThis item must not be sold to any third party vendors.▲ | ||
520 | ▼aThis dissertation considers the seaside city of Asbury Park, New Jersey as a site where histories and ongoing currents of racial and class domination, a vibrant gay and lesbian political economy, and queer more than human ecologies converge. In this convergence, Asbury Park is emblematic of the human and nonhuman cross currents that define the current geologic epoch, the Anthropocene, along the terms of Human activity and planetary precarity. While elements of Asbury Park's histories and social geographies have been robustly explored in popular historical exploration and in scholarly fields including geography, urban studies, and sociology, the implications of Asbury Park's queer, coastal specificities have been underexplored in the context of queer and feminist interventions in theorizing the Anthropocene. Through archival research, oral histories, literary analysis, and collaboration with more than human actors, this dissertation addresses this gap in research.In historicizing the early years of Asbury Park's official establishment in the late nineteenth century through archival research, two elements emerge as twinned conspirators and the foundations of Asbury Park's contemporary political economy: the racialized doctrine of Methodism and the white supremacist segregation of the Methodist church and its leadership, as well as domination over the socially constructed "natural" world of the site of Asbury Park as wild and untamed in the time of pre-development.Archival research historicizing the city's contemporary gay and lesbian political economy as a robust tourist and real estate investment destination for LGBTQ-identified clients indicates that the popular narrative of gay and lesbians "saving" the city from its reputation as crime-ridden and dangerous throughout the mid-twentieth century is rooted in the racist histories of segregation, displacement, and hostility that have plagued the city since its official establishment. Oral histories from members of the LGBTQ community in Asbury Park who have been part of the city's fabric as far back as the 1970s, however, adds texture, depth, and complexity to the city's contemporary circumstance as inaccessible to a vast number of marginalized inhabitants, including queer people, trans people, people of color, and nonhuman actors, due to soaring costs of living and deeply expensive, ecologically untenable development projects. Collaboration through queer, experimental readings of sea foam, horseshoe crabs and their lifeways, and other more than human worlds in Asbury Park moves the findings of this dissertation beyond the historicization of the city's human and more than human ecologies into the queer and wild world of speculative, liberatory imagination of ways of being in community with more than human kin. The implications of these findings indicate that Asbury Park is a generative site to examine the confluence of effects of ecological precarity as rooted in co-constituted systems of domination, including racial capitalism and settler colonial structures of conquest and discovery.▲ | ||
590 | ▼aSchool code: 0168.▲ | ||
650 | 4 | ▼aGender studies.▲ | |
650 | 4 | ▼aWomens studies.▲ | |
650 | 4 | ▼aLGBTQ studies.▲ | |
650 | 4 | ▼aSexuality.▲ | |
653 | ▼aNew Jersey▲ | ||
653 | ▼aAsbury Park▲ | ||
653 | ▼aAnthropocene▲ | ||
653 | ▼aQueer ecologies▲ | ||
690 | ▼a0733▲ | ||
690 | ▼a0453▲ | ||
690 | ▼a0211▲ | ||
690 | ▼a0492▲ | ||
710 | 2 | 0 | ▼aThe Ohio State University.▼bWomen's, Gender and Sexuality Studies.▲ |
773 | 0 | ▼tDissertations Abstracts International▼g85-04B.▲ | |
773 | ▼tDissertation Abstract International▲ | ||
790 | ▼a0168▲ | ||
791 | ▼aPh.D.▲ | ||
792 | ▼a2023▲ | ||
793 | ▼aEnglish▲ | ||
856 | 4 | 0 | ▼uhttp://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T16935834▼nKERIS▼z이 자료의 원문은 한국교육학술정보원에서 제공합니다.▲ |
Greetings From the Anthropocene: Queer Ecologies of Asbury Park, New Jersey[electronic resource]
자료유형
국외eBook
서명/책임사항
Greetings From the Anthropocene: Queer Ecologies of Asbury Park, New Jersey [electronic resource]
발행사항
[S.l.] : The Ohio State University. 2023 Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses , 2023
형태사항
1 online resource(236 p.)
일반주기
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-04, Section: B.
Advisor: Winnubst, Shannon.
Advisor: Winnubst, Shannon.
학위논문주기
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Ohio State University, 2023.
요약주기
This dissertation considers the seaside city of Asbury Park, New Jersey as a site where histories and ongoing currents of racial and class domination, a vibrant gay and lesbian political economy, and queer more than human ecologies converge. In this convergence, Asbury Park is emblematic of the human and nonhuman cross currents that define the current geologic epoch, the Anthropocene, along the terms of Human activity and planetary precarity. While elements of Asbury Park's histories and social geographies have been robustly explored in popular historical exploration and in scholarly fields including geography, urban studies, and sociology, the implications of Asbury Park's queer, coastal specificities have been underexplored in the context of queer and feminist interventions in theorizing the Anthropocene. Through archival research, oral histories, literary analysis, and collaboration with more than human actors, this dissertation addresses this gap in research.In historicizing the early years of Asbury Park's official establishment in the late nineteenth century through archival research, two elements emerge as twinned conspirators and the foundations of Asbury Park's contemporary political economy: the racialized doctrine of Methodism and the white supremacist segregation of the Methodist church and its leadership, as well as domination over the socially constructed "natural" world of the site of Asbury Park as wild and untamed in the time of pre-development.Archival research historicizing the city's contemporary gay and lesbian political economy as a robust tourist and real estate investment destination for LGBTQ-identified clients indicates that the popular narrative of gay and lesbians "saving" the city from its reputation as crime-ridden and dangerous throughout the mid-twentieth century is rooted in the racist histories of segregation, displacement, and hostility that have plagued the city since its official establishment. Oral histories from members of the LGBTQ community in Asbury Park who have been part of the city's fabric as far back as the 1970s, however, adds texture, depth, and complexity to the city's contemporary circumstance as inaccessible to a vast number of marginalized inhabitants, including queer people, trans people, people of color, and nonhuman actors, due to soaring costs of living and deeply expensive, ecologically untenable development projects. Collaboration through queer, experimental readings of sea foam, horseshoe crabs and their lifeways, and other more than human worlds in Asbury Park moves the findings of this dissertation beyond the historicization of the city's human and more than human ecologies into the queer and wild world of speculative, liberatory imagination of ways of being in community with more than human kin. The implications of these findings indicate that Asbury Park is a generative site to examine the confluence of effects of ecological precarity as rooted in co-constituted systems of domination, including racial capitalism and settler colonial structures of conquest and discovery.
주제
ISBN
9798380596305
관련 인기대출 도서