Abstract
Research is always personal. Our histories and orientations influence our selection
of subjects and responses to results. Writing the final chapter of my PhD, an
extended analysis of David B.'s graphic memoir Epileptic, and changed personal
circumstances meant that graphic, metaphoric and narratological analysis became
fused with experience of individual trauma.
I selected this comic because of B.'s development of a complex set of visual
metaphors, through which he tries to depict and come to terms with his brother's
epilepsy. The chapter's purpose was to apply a model of the operation of visual
metaphor in graphic narrative I had developed in its predecessors. But having
recently been diagnosed with primary progressive multiple sclerosis, the questions
of how, and whether, artists can successfully represent the experience of disability
or serious illness, and the extent to which patients' metaphorical expressions reflect
the aetiology of their conditions, took on a particularly acute salience.
I did not refer to my illness in the thesis, but it provides the primary motivation, and
narrative framing, for my current research. Using London College of
Communication's Archives and Special Collections Centre, I am exploring ways in
which artists and students use visual and imagistic metaphors to communicate
experiences of illness and disability, and documenting the process and results in
comics form. This paper will focus on my work with the Les Coleman collection of
comics and illustration, presenting initial results of metaphor analysis, and graphic
responses to the work of Justin Green, Ivan Brunetti, and David B., among others.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publication status | Published - 16 Nov 2018 |
| Event | Drawing Yourself In and Out of It : The 2nd International Amsterdam Comics Conference - Amsterdam, The Netherlands Duration: 15 Nov 2018 → 17 Nov 2018 |
Conference
| Conference | Drawing Yourself In and Out of It : The 2nd International Amsterdam Comics Conference |
|---|---|
| Period | 15/11/18 → 17/11/18 |
Bibliographical note
Organising Body: Amsterdam Comics, CLUE+ Research Institute for Culture, Cognition, History, and Heritage and Vrije Universiteit AmsterdamKeywords
- Art and design