Skip to Main Content
Frequently Asked Questions
Submit an ETD
Global Search Box
Need Help?
Keyword Search
Participating Institutions
Advanced Search
School Logo
Files
File List
Tobin Dissertation_Visual Dystopias in Mexico 1993-2008.pdf (2.57 MB)
ETD Abstract Container
Abstract Header
Visual Dystopias from Mexico’s Speculative Fiction: 1993-2008
Author Info
Tobin, Stephen Christopher
Permalink:
http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1437528785
Abstract Details
Year and Degree
2015, Doctor of Philosophy, Ohio State University, Spanish and Portuguese.
Abstract
There exists a corpus comprised of speculative fiction texts written and published from the early 1990s until the 2008 that express an urgency regarding the way vision and visuality function in Mexico. Among other notable elements, these texts feature a male cyborg who repairs his lost eye by gaining an ocular prosthesis that becomes a signal of his warrior masculinity, a female cyborg whose lost eye becomes an emblem of her lack, ocular reporters whose vision is coopted by mass media corporations, cyborg rejects owned by corporations whose lives becomes a reality-show segment, and a cancer-riddled president whose multiple operations are made into media spectacles. Aside from a recurrent interest in the interface between human and machine, these fictions also appear particularly concerned with television as a device that contains enough gravitational force that sucks the viewer into it in the privacy of his own home, and a public sphere-turned-virtualized reality that visual manipulates the Mexican masses. The motif that recurs in these narratives expresses a kind of deep suspicion of vision, a profound deception in new media visual technologies and the forces that make them possible. Often, the protagonist loses his or her eye, frequently having it replaced with some kind of technology that ostensibly enhances the loss of visual perception. But in all of these cases, the enhancement ultimately carries with it an unanticipated form of subjectification to or control by some larger force. These forces trace back to either power embodied in the form of political figures or transnational corporations. These dystopian, allegorical literary expressions are responding to larger, complex changes occurring in the social, political, economic and technological realms within Mexico under neoliberal economic policies instituted by the state, all of which can be read in the construction of these imagined subjects. These narratives express a profound distrust in the contemporary situation of Mexico, the political figures that run it and the mediascape that dis-orders their lives. These narratives register how Mexico may be undergoing a larger transformation within its current (micro-)scopic regime, shifting from a modern visuality of photography and film toward a more postmodern one of the electronic/televisual and the cybernetic/digital. They also suggest how subjectivity in Mexico is coming to be affected and altered by these visual technologies, seeing them as invasive of the culture as they are as penetrating to the body.
Committee
Laura Podalsky (Advisor)
Ana Del Sarto (Committee Member)
Ulises Juan Zevallos-Aguilar (Committee Member)
Pages
216 p.
Subject Headings
Latin American Literature
Keywords
Mexico, Mexican Science Fiction, Mexican Cyberpunk Science Fiction, Neoliberalism, Visual Culture, Visual Regimes
Recommended Citations
Refworks
EndNote
RIS
Mendeley
Citations
Tobin, S. C. (2015).
Visual Dystopias from Mexico’s Speculative Fiction: 1993-2008
[Doctoral dissertation, Ohio State University]. OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1437528785
APA Style (7th edition)
Tobin, Stephen.
Visual Dystopias from Mexico’s Speculative Fiction: 1993-2008.
2015. Ohio State University, Doctoral dissertation.
OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
, http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1437528785.
MLA Style (8th edition)
Tobin, Stephen. "Visual Dystopias from Mexico’s Speculative Fiction: 1993-2008." Doctoral dissertation, Ohio State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1437528785
Chicago Manual of Style (17th edition)
Abstract Footer
Document number:
osu1437528785
Download Count:
726
Copyright Info
© 2015, all rights reserved.
This open access ETD is published by The Ohio State University and OhioLINK.