South by Southwest: Westerns and Postcolonial Resistance

dc.contributor.advisorChrisman, Laura
dc.contributor.authorChaturvedi, Avu
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-01T22:21:21Z
dc.date.issued2025-08-01
dc.date.submitted2025
dc.descriptionThesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2025
dc.description.abstractSouth by Southwest examines the interplay between tropes from the Hollywood Western film genre and postcolonial masculinities and identity formation, with chapters situated in South Africa, Ireland, the Caribbean, and India. Each chapter pairs literary work and film to pursue this line of inquiry, as the study attempts to critically analyze works that reflect on the cultural and political complexities of pre- and post-imperial statehood, allowing it to engage with themes of identity, power, and representation that resonate within both American and postcolonial contexts. The texts considered explore the possibilities and paradoxes involved in transnational refraction when Hollywood genres are exported to the postcolonial world. Ultimately, the dissertation finds that radicality emerges from the Western when it is filtered through considerations of linguistic imperialism and state power, and that its latent conservatism survives when these factors are set aside in an avowal of ideological formations of heroes and villains under colonial logics.
dc.embargo.lift2030-07-06T22:21:21Z
dc.embargo.termsRestrict to UW for 5 years -- then make Open Access
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherChaturvedi_washington_0250E_28448.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1773/53551
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.rightsCC BY-NC-SA
dc.subjectAnglosphere
dc.subjectFilm
dc.subjectHollywood
dc.subjectPostcolonial
dc.subjectRadical
dc.subjectWestern
dc.subjectEnglish literature
dc.subjectFilm studies
dc.subject.otherEnglish
dc.titleSouth by Southwest: Westerns and Postcolonial Resistance
dc.typeThesis

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