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Zvláštní náklonnost: Genderové, rasové a mezidruhové vztahy v australském cestopisu Francise Ratcliffa
dc.contributor.advisorLorenz - Meyer, Dagmar
dc.creatorThompson, Faolan
dc.date.accessioned2022-10-17T11:29:57Z
dc.date.available2022-10-17T11:29:57Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/177562
dc.description.abstractFaolan Thompson A Strange Affection: Gender, Race, and Interspecies Relations in Francis Ratcliffe's Australian Travelogue Abstract Settler colonialism by the early twentieth century reshaped the Australian landscape, through which English ecologist and future conservationist Francis Ratcliffe (1904-1970) traveled in the name of scientific and economic evaluation. His travelogue Flying Fox and Drifting Sand (1947) detailed his stories of studying fruit bats (flying foxes) in less-densely-settled areas and provided a glimpse of settler life in the outback. Through close reading of this text, this thesis analyzes his interspecies approach to ecology; how race and gender frame those interspecies relations; his affective relationship and attentiveness to the animals and environment, and how travelogue opened possibilities for differential conceptions of epistemology, embodiment, science, and nature. The thesis investigates how intra-active and response-able approaches to nature can be read in historical accounts of scientific exploration. His relationships to white settler Australians and interest in conservation develop through intersecting stories of masculinity, colonialism, objectivity, animality, and race to offer a nuanced subject position in his travel narrative. Key words: Australia, gender, race,...en_US
dc.languageEnglishcs_CZ
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherUniverzita Karlova, Fakulta humanitních studiícs_CZ
dc.titleA Strange Affection: Gender, Race, and Interspecies Relations in Francis Ratcliffe's Australian Travelogueen_US
dc.typediplomová prácecs_CZ
dcterms.created2022
dcterms.dateAccepted2022-09-22
dc.description.departmentProgramme Gender Studiesen_US
dc.description.departmentProgram Genderová studiacs_CZ
dc.description.facultyFakulta humanitních studiícs_CZ
dc.description.facultyFaculty of Humanitiesen_US
dc.identifier.repId244498
dc.title.translatedZvláštní náklonnost: Genderové, rasové a mezidruhové vztahy v australském cestopisu Francise Ratcliffacs_CZ
dc.contributor.refereeKolářová, Kateřina
thesis.degree.nameMgr.
thesis.degree.levelnavazující magisterskécs_CZ
thesis.degree.disciplineGender Studiesen_US
thesis.degree.disciplineGender Studiescs_CZ
thesis.degree.programGender Studiesen_US
thesis.degree.programGender Studiescs_CZ
uk.thesis.typediplomová prácecs_CZ
uk.taxonomy.organization-csFakulta humanitních studií::Program Genderová studiacs_CZ
uk.taxonomy.organization-enFaculty of Humanities::Programme Gender Studiesen_US
uk.faculty-name.csFakulta humanitních studiícs_CZ
uk.faculty-name.enFaculty of Humanitiesen_US
uk.faculty-abbr.csFHScs_CZ
uk.degree-discipline.csGender Studiescs_CZ
uk.degree-discipline.enGender Studiesen_US
uk.degree-program.csGender Studiescs_CZ
uk.degree-program.enGender Studiesen_US
thesis.grade.csVýborněcs_CZ
thesis.grade.enExcellenten_US
uk.abstract.enFaolan Thompson A Strange Affection: Gender, Race, and Interspecies Relations in Francis Ratcliffe's Australian Travelogue Abstract Settler colonialism by the early twentieth century reshaped the Australian landscape, through which English ecologist and future conservationist Francis Ratcliffe (1904-1970) traveled in the name of scientific and economic evaluation. His travelogue Flying Fox and Drifting Sand (1947) detailed his stories of studying fruit bats (flying foxes) in less-densely-settled areas and provided a glimpse of settler life in the outback. Through close reading of this text, this thesis analyzes his interspecies approach to ecology; how race and gender frame those interspecies relations; his affective relationship and attentiveness to the animals and environment, and how travelogue opened possibilities for differential conceptions of epistemology, embodiment, science, and nature. The thesis investigates how intra-active and response-able approaches to nature can be read in historical accounts of scientific exploration. His relationships to white settler Australians and interest in conservation develop through intersecting stories of masculinity, colonialism, objectivity, animality, and race to offer a nuanced subject position in his travel narrative. Key words: Australia, gender, race,...en_US
uk.file-availabilityV
uk.grantorUniverzita Karlova, Fakulta humanitních studií, Program Genderová studiacs_CZ
thesis.grade.code1
uk.publication-placePrahacs_CZ
uk.thesis.defenceStatusO


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