Epp, Michael
Finding Space, Making Place: Understanding the Importance of Social Space to Local Punk Communities
Independent music venues are important hubs of social activity and cultural
production around which local punk scenes are both physically and conceptually
organized. Through interactions with participants over extended periods of time, these
spaces become meaningful places that are imbued with the energy, history and memories
of local music scenes. When a venue is shut down, local punk scenes experience a
temporary disruption as participants struggle to begin the process of re-establishing a new
autonomous social space free from outsider interference. Therefore, moving from the
local, to the national, to the international, from the small and personal to the vast and
global, as well as from the physical to the virtual, this dissertation illustrates the actual,
everyday practices of local scenes across Canada, addressing the larger issue of the loss
of alternative music venues occurring on a global scale and the resulting impact on punk
scene participants. Through the use of ethnographic research methods such as participant
observation, photographic documentation, interviews and surveys, this dissertation
engages with contemporary punk scene participants in order to give voice to those often
ignored in grand narratives of punk history. As such, traditional concepts of punk as a
utopic countercultural space are challenged to reveal the complexity and diversity that
exists within contemporary local punk scenes, where participants often experience equal
amounts of cooperation, competition, tension and struggle. By choosing to engage with
contemporary experiences and interpretations of punk culture, this research addresses the
changing landscape of local scenes, as punk participants attempt to carve out spaces of
representation for themselves in an exceedingly mediated world.
Author Keywords: Canada, music venues, punk, scene, social space, subculture
Alpha and Omega: Interpretive Strategies and Freedom of Choice in Fallout 3
Game texts present unique and dynamic opportunities for lability: how readers can make choices while reading that alter the narrative's nature or outcome. Labile decisions are neither simply correct nor incorrect--the reader renders judgement to produce a desired outcome. When encountering labile challenges, players employ an interpretive strategy to resolve them. Many game texts tell stories. Games anticipate readers' interpretive strategies to orchestrate a desired result in labile narratives and manipulate players into inhabiting an identity in a variety of different ways. This thesis examines how Fallout 3 does so with periodically opposable intentions, mainly applying an inconsistent moral orthodoxy via the player character's father, but occasionally exhibiting the series' nihilistic philosophy that disdains American exceptionalism, undermining the orthodoxy. This isolates and breaks down the interpretive communities the player inhabits to play the game.
Author Keywords: Exceptionalism, Identity, Lability, Morality, Narrative, Video Games
The Shaman Detective: A Comparative Reading of Enchantment and Animism in Contemporary Japanese Detective Fiction
This thesis examines a specific figure that appears throughout contemporary Japanese detective fiction (across different media), which I have termed the Shaman detective. A liminal figure that combines Japanese folk cosmologies with contemporary detective work, the Shaman detective is at once similar to, yet separate from, western postmodernist detective fiction. Invested in narratives of enchantment the Shaman detective is marked by his rejection of the epistemological ties of the modern and classical detectives that cause his counterparts to fail in the face of postmodern subjectivism. Committed to il-logic, dreaming, play, and intuition, the Shaman detective exists in the realm of the Fantastic, bridging the gap between mundane and marvellous realities. This thesis reads Shaman detective texts using western postmodernist theory with Todorov's theory of the Fantastic and Jane Bennett's New Materialism. This is synthesized with Japanese thought traditions, cosmologies and philosophies, in order to draw out the Shaman detective.
Author Keywords: Enchantment, Japanese Fiction, New Materialism, Postmodern Fiction, Shamanism, the Fantastic