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Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 Dragon Lovers and Plant Politics : Queering the Nonhuman in Hoa Pham’s Wave and Ellen Van Neerven’s “Water”
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'In her 2015 novel Wave, the Vietnamese Australian writer Hoa Pham creates a world in which fantasy is constitutive of reality. Enshrouded in lyricism and a faint veil of racial melancholia, the novel portrays how a lesbian Asian couple, Midori and Âu Cô, coping on the margins of contemporary Australian society find belonging in an imagined nonhuman identity, as dragons-in-love. Both characters are migrants who embody different subversions of inculcated dragon stories. Midori’s early sexual experiences in Japan involve enacting secret dragon performances with her girlfriend. Âu Cô’s sexual orientation defies the expectations of her Vietnamese name, which means a mythic mountain fairy married to the dragon king. The strategic trope of queering the dragon in the story comes to highlight the couple’s desire to reclaim a functional self in the face of new racial and sexual stereotypes in Australia. In a more radical manner, the Indigenous Australian writer Ellen Van Neerven’s 2014 speculative eco-novella “Water” queers the nonhuman in ways that challenge cultural essentialism and human exceptionalism. At the heart of the novella’s futuristic vision is a newly-discovered species, the plantpeople, who are sentient beings capable of reading, speaking, and, most importantly, adapting to a changing environment. As the novella connects the plantpeople to Indigenous Australian inscriptions of land, the homo-erotic love between the Indigenous protagonist and the leader of the plantpeople dismantles heterosexual norms while exposing colonial claims of history and sovereignty that suppress an Indigenous multispecies ontology.' (Introduction)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 20 Dec 2021 13:12:22
1048–1065 Dragon Lovers and Plant Politics : Queering the Nonhuman in Hoa Pham’s Wave and Ellen Van Neerven’s “Water”small AustLit logo ISLE : Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment
Subjects:
  • Wave Hoa Pham , 2016 single work novella
  • Heat and Light Ellen van Neerven , 2014 selected work short story
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