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"Against the Unwritability of Utopia" : Resurgent Bodies of Joy in Contemporary Queer Indigenous Literature

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Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa

Abstract

Working at the intersection of queer feminist affect studies and queer Indigenous studies, this thesis focuses on theorizations and enactments of queer Indigenous joy in Billy-Ray Belcourt's A History of My Brief Body, Gregory Scofield's Love Medicine and One Song, and Joshua Whitehead's Jonny Appleseed. It explores how these contemporary texts uniquely emphasize the relational queer Indigenous body’s tenacious capacity for care and love in order to enact more breathable, collective, and ultimately joyful modes of embodied life, even amid the stifling settler colonial present. I argue that, in doing so, these authors foster joy as a rebellious and healing affective orientation that opposes injurious colonial constructions of queer Indigenous embodiment and contributes to the future-bearing project of radical Indigenous resurgence. By examining these authors' invaluable interventions with joy, which is largely an under-acknowledged positive affect, this thesis aims to convey why the young but burgeoning field of queer Indigenous literature merits far more critical attention than it has received thus far.

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queer theory, Indigenous, affect theory, feminist, joy, queer Indigenous, Indigiqueer, gender studies, sexuality, LGBTQ2S, felt theory, Indigenous resurgence, Two-Spirit, sovereign erotic, care, wonder, love, poetry, novel, memoir, essays

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