Women in White: Performing White Femininity from 1865-Present

dc.contributor.advisorHarding, James Men_US
dc.contributor.authorWalker, Jonelleen_US
dc.contributor.departmentTheatreen_US
dc.contributor.publisherDigital Repository at the University of Marylanden_US
dc.contributor.publisherUniversity of Maryland (College Park, Md.)en_US
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-04T06:35:40Z
dc.date.available2022-02-04T06:35:40Z
dc.date.issued2021en_US
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation explores how white woman character tropes on stage, page, and screen are both haunted by histories of post-Civil War racial terror and themselves haunt white women’s everyday embodiment. This spectral framework is undergirded by a less traditionally academic approach: a self-reflexive interrogation of a compulsion to endangerment, peril, fear, and self-destruction the author observes in representations of white women and in herself. The study of white femininity represented in theatre, literature, film, and social media is narrowed to focus on this predilection for danger and its political implications for racialized-gender embodiment. The dissertation attributes this phenomenon to a dialectic central to white femininity in an Anglophone context: being in/the danger, that is simultaneously being victim and instigator of violence, tragedy, and destruction. The project pursues being in/the danger within the context of theatre and performance studies by asking: How has the white woman been made and continuously remade through staging white woman character tropes? Which gestures, affects, and self-fashionings from these tropes haunt everyday white womanhood? Each chapter examines one trope and its implications in detail, including the damsel in distress, the girl crime victim, the suicidal authoress, the anorexic waif, among others. The dissertation examines how characterizations of melancholy, endangerment, and frailty in these characters shaped common and highly racialized understandings of white womanhood during the period studied. To illustrate this broad cultural phenomenon, the dissertation studies an appropriately broad set of objects including plays; films; literature; artist biographies; and social media communities.en_US
dc.identifierhttps://doi.org/10.13016/nyhk-boeu
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/28435
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subject.pqcontrolledTheateren_US
dc.subject.pqcontrolledTheater historyen_US
dc.subject.pqcontrolledWomen's studiesen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledAutoethnographyen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledCritical Whiteness Studiesen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledPerformance Studiesen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledTheateren_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledTheatreen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledWhite Womenen_US
dc.titleWomen in White: Performing White Femininity from 1865-Presenten_US
dc.typeDissertationen_US

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