Emily Pohl-Weary
Research Interests
Relevant Thesis-Based Degree Programs
Great Supervisor Week Mentions
听
It's听#greatsupervisor听week听@亚洲天堂GradSchool, so I want to give a shout-out to听@emilypohlweary听for being a helpful and supportive supervisor!
Graduate Student Supervision
Master's Student Supervision
Theses completed in 2010 or later are listed below. Please note that there is a 6-12 month delay to add the latest theses.
Immigrants make up almost a quarter of the Canadian population (Statistics Canada, 2017), but the emphasis on success and integration in immigration discourse overshadows the difficult aftermath of relocation for many immigrant families, especially on immigrant children. After all, 鈥渋f the promise of citizenship is offered as a promise of happiness, then you have to demonstrate that you are a worthy recipient of its promise鈥 (Ahmed, 2010, p. 133). However, many factors make it challenging for even families to discuss these complexities with each other. In this thesis, I will first outline the intricate nuances of the changes in immigrant family dynamics, then illustrate the importance of establishing a space where immigrant children can fully express and process their experiences and emotions in order to write a narrative that transcends their identities as ones solely defined by the hardships and trauma of immigration. Then, I will discuss why the epistolary form, with its intimate and candid nature, can provide this space for migrant children, and how its representation of consciousness can be an effective tool in constructing truth and identity when it comes to narrating migrant child experiences.
No abstract available.
Scholarly discourse surrounding Francesca Lia Block鈥檚 novels tends to spotlight the author鈥檚 interrogation of pedagogies concerning sexual trauma. Lee A. Talley and Elizabeth Marshall, for instance, argue that Block鈥檚 texts invite the reader to rethink conventional approaches to sexual assault narratives. Block鈥檚 texts shift the critical attention placed originally on the victims of sexual abuse onto the victims鈥 male aggressors, whether that be the 鈥渟kanky鈥 (Block 102) rapacious father figure that 鈥淲olf鈥 recuperates from traditional fairytales (Marshall 218), or the cultural forces that enable predatory figures to both construct and enact their sexual fantasies in the first place (Talley 119). Like Marshall and Talley, my thesis examines cultural eroticisms of girlhood in Block鈥檚 work, attending to the predatory man鈥檚 imagination of eroticized girlhood. Specifically, my thesis focuses on three tales in The Rose and the Beast 鈥 鈥淏east,鈥 鈥淪now,鈥 and 鈥淐harm" 鈥 and explores the male characters鈥 sexualization of girlhood by emphasizing their engagement with a critically overlooked feature of the collection: the garden. First, I situate Sarah Dinter鈥檚 understanding of the literary garden as an expression of adult constructions of childhood within a psychoanalytic context, arguing, through Freud鈥檚 theory of dreamwork, that flowers in the garden function as objects of displacement through which the father in 鈥淏east鈥 and the gardener in 鈥淪now鈥 repress their pedophilic fantasies about their daughters. My second chapter focuses on 鈥淐harm鈥 and considers the rapacious father figure鈥檚 pedophilia through a critical race and post-colonial perspective. Merging James R. Kincaid鈥檚 theory of childhood as an erotic lens with Anne Anlin Cheng鈥檚 work on racial melancholy and cultural constructions of the 鈥測ellow woman鈥 (415), I interpret Pop鈥檚 photographs as potent expressions of the infantilization underlying the erotic racialization of the Asian woman 鈥 a racialization that both disavows and retains the character Rev as an ethnic other.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
For nearly fifty years, science fiction creators and posthumanist scholars have been imagining what our future environments alongside androids and cyborgs will look like. While some see technology as a threat to humanity (Francis Fukuyama), others envision new forms of subjectivity (N. Katherine Hayles and Donna Haraway) that can be derived from the 鈥渄ecentering of the human in relation to either evolutionary, ecological, or technological coordinates鈥 (Cary Wolfe xvi). Whether these narratives depict utopic or dystopic futures, as humans travel into space, it is not just the final frontier they are discovering, but also their posthumanity. The cartoon Final Space (2018), a space opera parody with a high appeal to young adult audiences, depicts a posthuman future where humans and artificial lifeforms co-exist within the same environments. However, it is not without distinct liberal humanist hierarchies where biological life is valued over that of artificial life. Using a posthumanist framework, I explore the liberal humanist hierarchies present between the human and robotic characters within Final Space and examine how the show鈥檚 use of parody interrogates this anthropocentric mindset through a study of three robotic characters. The S.A.M.E.S. defy their sameness when their brief moments of individuality upset liberal humanist hierarchies; yet, they all perish within the show鈥檚 first season. Using theories of artificial morality, KVN depicts an autonomous moral agent whose existence confounds various posthuman boundaries, particularly those surrounding life and death. Lastly, HUE鈥檚 change from the AI of the Galaxy One spaceship into a small robotic shell aligns with Hayles鈥 argument about the necessity to consider embodiment for the posthuman subject. Using Anne McCaffrey鈥檚 The Ship Who Sang as a comparative text, this thesis examines the hierarchy of AIs and artificial bodies in Final Space through the lens of posthuman ethics and critical disability studies.
In Eurocentric culture, misused reductionist handles are manifestations of reductionism鈥檚 mutation from a specialized tool to examine limited aspects of the world into a worldview of its own, a fragmented epistemology 鈥減redicated on the discovery of a true world of realities lying behind a veil of appearances鈥 (Latour 474-475). As someone whose na茂ve belief in the Eurocentric concept of Truth was challenged by exposure to Indigenous ways of knowing, I examine in this thesis the consequences of this misuse of reductionist handles by contrasting Eurocentric Canadian with Indigenous Canadian literature. In 鈥淩oyal Beatings,鈥 Alice Munro depicts how theatricality, a reductionist handle, is internalized by characters who thereby reduce themselves to culturally created roles; in 鈥淢iles City, Montana,鈥 she depicts how idealism, another reductionist handle, is internalized by characters who then face irreconcilable contradictions in reality. On the other hand, the Nuu-chah-nulth origin story 鈥淗ow Son of Raven Captured the Day,鈥 presented in E. Richard Atleo鈥檚 Tsawalk, uses theatricality as a holistic rather than reductionist tool that emphasizes the importance of maintaining respect for all. Thomas King鈥檚 Green Grass, Running Water also portrays the conflict between Eurocentric and Indigenous epistemologies through its emphasis on contextualization and use of water as a powerful holistic symbol, thus clarifying water鈥檚 rebellion against reductionism in 鈥淢iles City, Montana.鈥 The concept of misused reductionist handles is useful for future research on reductionism鈥檚 epistemological influence, which can be guided by examining not only the differences between the Eurocentric worldview and other worldviews, but their intersections as well.
No abstract available.
Children and teens can鈥攁nd often do鈥攍ook for representation of their lives in children鈥檚 literature. An emerging area in children鈥檚 fiction is the inclusion of transgender and non-binary characters. However, these fictional characters are usually teens, although increasingly, children are being included. There are few works that include transgender and non-binary parents, even though they are part of our society, leading to a gap in children鈥檚 literature. Notably, Happy Families, the earliest mainstream children鈥檚 novel with a transgender parent, was only published in 2012. In this exegesis, I explore the research strategies and creative process involved in developing my children鈥檚 middle grade novel, The Fractured Life of Becca Crease, which features a key relationship between a teenaged protagonist and her non-binary parent. I discuss how transgender and non-binary parents are portrayed in published English language children鈥檚 literature and materials in North America. Additionally, I explain how my process of writing a contemporary novel was informed by understanding how children and teens may experience a parent鈥檚 gender transition, particularly within a family resiliency framework, and how mainstream society鈥檚 awareness of gender identity and associated language is rapidly shifting. While there are currently very few stories portraying families with transgender or non-binary parents, highlighting this gap may bring awareness to writers and publishers concerned with improving diversity in children鈥檚 publishing.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
If this is your researcher profile you can log in to the portal to update your details and provide recruitment preferences.