This thesis utilizes narrative and formal analyses of the two highest-grossing science fiction pictures from the year 2005 in order to illustrate how imaginary cinematic worlds have been...Show moreThis thesis utilizes narrative and formal analyses of the two highest-grossing science fiction pictures from the year 2005 in order to illustrate how imaginary cinematic worlds have been infiltrated by the national trauma of 9/11 and its political and societal aftermath. With a main focus on drawing parallels between a post-9/11 American society and Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith and War of the Worlds, this thesis strives to illuminate a larger and more complicated relationship between mid-2000s sci-fi and the new world these films were made in. It offers the reader insight into the themes and modes of thinking that pre-occupied Americans after not only the 9/11 attacks, but the subsequent US invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq as well. It draws upon theories on the symbiotic relationship between national identity and cinematic representation that have often been discussed by scholars such as Siegfried Kracauer and Alison Landsberg.Show less
Research master thesis | Literary Studies (research) (MA)
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In this thesis I want to create an intersectional, queer intervention in animal studies taking previous animal, critical race studies and queer theory intersections – ecofeminism, material feminism...Show moreIn this thesis I want to create an intersectional, queer intervention in animal studies taking previous animal, critical race studies and queer theory intersections – ecofeminism, material feminism and queer ecology – into account within the context of literary studies and cultural analysis. Therefore, I want to ask: In what way do intersectional alliances – both theoretical and artistic – formed from an animal and queer studies perspective, affirmatively (re)imagine (material) queer intimacies human-nonhuman relations to contribute to an nonanthropocentric framework? To answer this question, I want to employ the term/concept queer as both a critical and productive tool that enables transgression of disciplines and even the academy itself, into the material reality of non-human animals to examine human-animal relations and intimacies.Show less
Research master thesis | Literary Studies (research) (MA)
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This thesis researches a Sanskrit law code called the Manusmrti or Manava Dharmasastra, translated in English as "The Laws of Manu". Through a critical analysis of the translations and...Show moreThis thesis researches a Sanskrit law code called the Manusmrti or Manava Dharmasastra, translated in English as "The Laws of Manu". Through a critical analysis of the translations and interpretations of Indologists Wendy Doniger and Patrick Olivelle, it will be argued that the current interpretations of the Manusmrti are starkly Western and prove a continuation of a discourse initiated in British colonial India. This discourse entails a framework of Western law and law code. The Manusmrti, however, is concerned with the Sanskrit concept of "dharma". With the help of the translation theories of Walter Benjamin and Jacques Derrida it will be argued that "dharma" is a concept very distinct from the Western "law" and proves untranslatable. Furthermore, this thesis proposes a reading for the Manusmrti different from the current Western framework of law. The proposed new interpretation is based upon the concept of "aphorism" as described by Friedrich Nietzsche. To elucidate the differences in philosophy between the current interpretations and the interpretation proposed in this thesis, the theories of Gilles Deleuze and Benedictus Spinoza will be deployed. Their ideas will help to show that the proposed interpretation will ultimately entail another, more productive world-view for the Manusmrti and the conceptualisation of its key term "dharma".Show less