Feminist Apocalypse

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A01=Ezekiel Crago
ableism
apocalypse
Author_Ezekiel Crago
capitalism
care
Category=ATF
Childhood
community
daughters
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethics
extinction
feminism
film studies
forthcoming
gender
gender norms
gender studies
kinship
love
man
media studies
motherhood
natalism
neoliberalism
normativity
post-apocalypse
posthumanism
poverty
reproductive rights
science fiction
solidarity
survival
survivance
tragedy
violence
woman
Women studies

Product details

  • ISBN 9781666981834
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Feminist Apocalypse explores how the post-apocalypse is best seen as a narrative mode rather than genre, and its use in cinematic narrative began in the 1950s, largely fueled by the Cold War and fear of nuclear annihilation.

In this book, Ezekiel Crago argues early post-apocalyptic films were primarily concerned with the plight of their usually white male protagonist, but this changed in the 1980s, as films and television shows started focusing instead on white women protagonists. Crago explores post-apocalyptic films such as The Terminator, Dawn of the Dead, Tank Girl, Mad Max: Fury Road, A Quiet Place, etc. and their depictions of women surviving extreme conditions, establishing the theme of the need for others to make surviving livable; women surviving and sometimes thriving through the use of violence and military masculinity; films that center the problem of post-apocalyptic natality and the role of motherhood; the children produced after the end of the world; and examines some works that queer a system of binary gender opposition, suggesting utopian possibility. The interest in the role of women after the end of the world has increased since then, and this book examines such representations of gender using interdisciplinary feminist scholarship, gender studies, culture studies, race studies, and film studies.

It argues that these films reveal the ways that the apocalypse has already happened, its effects are not evenly distributed, and that those taking the role of woman are affected by it more than those who act as man. Ultimately, Crago analyzes how the apocalypse acts as allegory for the effects of neoliberal capitalism in the last half century.

Ezekiel Crago lectures at four colleges based in the USA.

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