Becoming An-Other. An Ecofeminist Critique of Contemporary Canadian Drama

  1. Voyer, Véronique
Supervised by:
  1. Manuela Palacios González Director

Defence university: Universidade de Santiago de Compostela

Fecha de defensa: 19 April 2022

Committee:
  1. Juan Ignacio Oliva Cruz Chair
  2. Laura María Lojo Rodríguez Secretary
  3. Lorraine Kerslake Young Committee member

Type: Thesis

Abstract

This dissertation analyses six Canadian plays through an ecofeminist lens. The study, which focuses on stories written by francophone, anglophone, and Indigenous playwrights, attempts to discover: 1) In what ways do the plays show the intertwining of ecocide, colonialism, gender, and racial inequalities in Canada? And 2) what new tropes and theatrical forms emerge from this political theatre? This research shows that the plays analysed create narrative structures and systems of representation (e.g., of gender, of human/nonhuman relationships) that stress the entangling of racial and gender inequalities in environmental destruction, highlighting the importance of animal studies and decolonial thinking, two aspects sometimes absent from mainstream ecofeminist critique.