From berdache to Two-Spirit & Gay[re]constructing American "indianness" in the post-apocalypse

  1. FUENTES SOTO, HÉCTOR JOSÉ
unter der Leitung von:
  1. Justine Tally Watson Doktorvater/Doktormutter
  2. María Luz González Rodríguez Co-Doktormutter

Universität der Verteidigung: Universidad de La Laguna

Fecha de defensa: 26 von September von 2017

Gericht:
  1. María del Mar Pérez Gil Präsident/in
  2. María José Chivite de León Sekretärin
  3. José Manuel Estévez-Saá Vocal
Fachbereiche:
  1. Filología Inglesa y Alemana

Art: Dissertation

Teseo: 502095 DIALNET lock_openRIULL editor

Zusammenfassung

Ever since the beginnings of time, humankind has wondered about the apocalypse and the end of times. The arrival of Columbus brought the apocalypse to the Americas and pre-Columbian civilizations were subjugated to centuries of decimation, cultural trauma, and identity loss. The figure of the berdache -a biological being with two souls inhabiting his or her body, being the second one that of the opposite sex- was nearly wiped off and left the American Indian tradition without one of its foundations. Given the orality of American Indians, the narratives and stories were passed onto generations until they found a way to put it on paper in the second half of the twentieth century. The rise of the LGB movement in the 80s gave visibility to a community that was suffering the consequences of the AIDS crisis. The [gay] American Indian discourse found its cornerstone after publishing "Living the Spirit," the first anthology for and by gay American Indian writers. The nineties and early 2000s were prolific in terms of production and style, and were a success as it facilitated the exposition of the gay American Indian discourse, which was doomed to get stagnated as a consequence of PTSD, Post-Apocalypse Stress Disorder, and the inability to move forward and cope with the past in a healthy way. Covering the work of Sidner Larson and his proposal of a post-apocalypse theoretical model, the views on gender proposed by Judith Butler and Michel Foucault, and a vast corpus of trauma theory and cultural trauma, this work analyzes the reconstruction of the American 'Indianness' through two literary anthologies that construct a time-space discourse that begins 'after the end.'