The Environmental Politics of Grief in the Queer Anti-Pastoral
Clark, Cameron Chase
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2018-09-14
Abstract
This thesis analyses the queer anti-pastoral as a cinematic sub-genre that disrupts pastoral conventions of nature as a site for harmonious patterns and generative transformations at the service of the human. Bringing more attention to grief and ecocritical negativity in this thesis, I track how the affective-aesthetic arrangements of loss, misrecognition, and substitution provide an alternative queer environmental politics not based on nostalgic memorialization or sensual discovery, but on painful disconnections that emphasize the failures of accessing an interpersonal or ecological interdependency. Rather than read such encounters as mired in negativity for no vital gains, however, I propose that the queer anti-pastoral offers useful avenues to rethink the terms of the social and the environmental by traversing their very negations and subsequent transformations. Pairing together Eugenie Brinkema’s affective formalism with Leo Bersani’s aesthetic theories, I ultimately argue that the queer anti-pastoral provides an ecological ethics of detachment that is strategically tempered by grief so as not to romanticize the forces of negation. In so doing, the queer anti-pastoral expresses an environmental consciousness pertaining to aggressive human actions, and it brings to light the disastrous consequences of hierarchical relations between the human, nonhuman, and environment.