PhDThis thesis explores the interconnecting themes of time, death and the subjective in relation
to performance, the performative and the critical act of writing. It is structured as a
heterogenous series of case studies of a range of performed and petformative events, each
offering a focus for an investigation of how the key terms of time and death operate in and
around that event, and of how those terms lead to other areas of investigation. It deploys
analytical and conceptual frameworks from, amongst others, the disciplines of
psychoanalysis, queer theory, cultural studies, the visual arts, literary theory and
performance studies to develop a series of interdisciplinary readings of subjects including
the perfonnative construction of subjectivity, the temporality of photography, the temporal
and spatial aspects of domestic architecture in relation to performance and installation, and
the epistolary exchange as performance event.
The thesis also addresses the problematics of how to engage in the process of critical
writing in response to the ephemerality of performance, and theorises "performative
writing" in relation to the broader themes of time and death. A range of textual forms are
deployed in the text, including fictional autobiography, love letters, instructions for
scientific experiments, prose poems and fragmented essays in multiple voices. By
repeatedly reinventing the form through which the writing is presented, the thesis also
implicitly explores the limits of textuality in the context of the creation and presentation of
the doctoral thesis itself