Thesis Defence: Jessica Hanzelkova

Tuesday, May 12, 2020 12:00 pm - 12:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

The Artifacts of No-Place

Jessica Hanzelkova thesis image

Abstract: 

This thesis assembles within it a glimpse of ‘a life’. It traces a path of disillusion to dissolution, in navigating a search for identity in an increasingly globalized world. It is an exceptionally personal journey.

Settling into a trajectory carved by posthumanism, the thesis finds a steady muse in the twenty-first century as a temporal conception and paradigmatic tipping point. More specifically, it has allowed me to channel the embodied liminality I have felt during this time, as a woman, a digital native, and a perceived other, through a series of devices affixed within the space of the head – The Artifacts of No-Place. In disrupting identification and playing with the boundaries of the body each artifact has lent itself to different performances, different means of liberation, concealment, and spectacle. This grounds an otherwise disembodied speculation on disillusion and dissolution, within a process of making. The following document captures a methodology of serious play undertaken in this thesis. It assembles lengthy fragments of thought that navigate struggles with otherness, home, and difference, adjacent to visual encounters, headline clippings, and embodied narratives. This is done to mirror my own understanding of belonging, as it morphed to accept processes of becoming. By assembling these seemingly disparate elements I interrogate boundaries imposed and propagated in society, by mapping a meandering route towards a posthuman and nomadic sensibility.

Scrolling endlessly, scaling rapidly, we dissolve and reform within global movements of information, energy, and ideas.

The examining committee is as follows:

Supervisor: Dereck Revington
Committee Members: Anne Bordeleau, Robert Jan van Pelt
External Reader: Christie Pearson

The defence examination will take place:  
May 12, 2020, 12:00pm, Zoom URL: https://zoom.us/j/91226507036
Password 
available via the graduate student Learn page or by request.


The committee has been approved as authorized by the Graduate Studies Committee. A copy of the thesis is available for perusal in ARC 2106A.