Blood, tears, and sweat: An intersectional excavation of the literary vampire in neoliberal discourse

Jessica Elizabeth Birch, Purdue University

Abstract

This project engages in a critical examination of the figure of the sympathetic vampire in paranormal romance novels and its relationship to neoliberal individualism, using an analytic frame informed by Valerie Smith's conceptualization of black feminist thinking; it focuses on the portrayal of the neoliberal institutions of nationalism, race, heterosexuality, and motherhood within Jewelle Gomez's The Gilda Stories, L.A. Banks's Minion, and Charlaine Harris's Dead Until Dark. As the ideology of neoliberal individualism has shaped the dominant discourse of the United States, neoliberal individualism has also remade the discourse of monstrosity with regard to vampires. The shifting representation of the vampire in many paranormal romances is profoundly conflicted; it often explicitly calls attention to the injustice of social inequalities while also implicitly reinforcing institutional ideologies that deny the impact of capitalism and reinforce neoliberal individualism. This project illuminates how, within the paradigm of dominant neoliberal discourse, paranormal romances with vampire/human liaisons construct gender-specific, race-dependent understandings of cultural narratives that draw upon the ideological frames of neoliberal institutions to perpetuate social inequality.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Mullen, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Modern literature|American studies|Womens studies

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