‘The eye could literally not follow her’: deviant girlhood, reproduction, and meat animals in twentieth-century American literature and culture

dc.contributor.authorGray, Amy-Leigh Jenna
dc.contributor.examiningcommitteeJoo, Serenity (English, Theatre, Film & Media)
dc.contributor.examiningcommitteeGuard, Julie (Labour Studies)
dc.contributor.examiningcommitteeCastricano, Jodey (University of British Columbia)
dc.contributor.supervisorMedoro, Dana
dc.date.accessioned2024-11-28T15:45:17Z
dc.date.available2024-11-28T15:45:17Z
dc.date.issued2024-11-23
dc.date.submitted2024-11-23T13:59:59Zen_US
dc.degree.disciplineEnglish, Theatre, Film and Media
dc.degree.levelDoctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)
dc.description.abstractThis project follows fictional girls in American cultural texts as they move within and sideways to spaces of meat production and animal agriculture, negotiating their reproductive futures alongside the animal allies they find in these spaces. What might happen when industrial meat production, animal domestication and the girl are held together? I assert that the intimacies between girls and domesticated agricultural animals are sites through which these girls work through not only their fraught relationship with animality but also with America as a white supremacist, patriarchal, and settler-colonial project. I thus ultimately ask how they gesture towards alternate futures at odds with their contemporary American empires. Chapter One centres Ona who labours in the sausage room and in childbirth to show how her womb troubles the efficiency of meat imagined by Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, which I demonstrate is also intimately tied to reproduction. Chapter Two turns to Tillie Olsen’s Yonnondio From the Thirties to follow Mazie’s coming of age, which takes place sideways to three spaces: the home, the slaughterhouse, and the depleted Prairie landscape. Chapter Three looks to Charles Burnett’s film, Killer of Sheep, to ask how the character of Angela, who first appears in a dog mask in a threshold space, blurs boundaries between the home and the slaughterhouse as well as between dogs, sheep, and humans. Chapter Four moves to occupied Hawai’i, looking to Lovey and Toni, the Japanese Hawaiian girls who narrate Lois-Ann Yamanaka’s Wild Meat and the Bully Burgers and Heads by Harry. I question how both girls negotiate menstruation, pregnancy, and their sexualities alongside domesticated animals violently mounted, killed, and consumed. Chapter Five reads Bong Joon Ho’s film, Okja, for its representation of Mija and Okja’s interspecies intimacy as queer. I also argue that the film positions Mija as a flexible acrobat who transacts herself transnationally. Finally, three interludes punctuate this project to tug at questions of girlhood, domesticated animals, abortion, and American literature. Together, I assemble a chorus of girls and their animal allies who speak across a century of American texts, centring love and care in a landscape of violent empire.
dc.description.noteFebruary 2025
dc.description.sponsorshipUMGF (2019-2023)
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/38687
dc.language.isoeng
dc.subjectgirlhood
dc.subject20th century American literature
dc.subjectmeat production
dc.subject20th century American film
dc.title‘The eye could literally not follow her’: deviant girlhood, reproduction, and meat animals in twentieth-century American literature and culture
local.subject.manitobano
oaire.awardNumber752-2023-1261
oaire.awardTitleSSHRC Doctoral Award
oaire.awardURIhttps://www.sshrc-crsh.gc.ca/funding-financement/programs-programmes/fellowships/doctoral-doctorat-eng.aspx
project.funder.identifierhttps://doi.org/10.13039/501100000155
project.funder.nameSocial Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
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