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Yearly Archives: 2012

News Review: November 2012

Americas

Brazil

Business

Brazilian publisher Barba Negra is closing its doors, after almost three years investing in national comics (Morro da Favela) and foreign editions (Killofer, Bastien Vivés and David Small, among others). Link (21/11/2012, Portuguese, GS)

Culture

Moonflux collects some unnoticed cases of racism and prejudice in translations to Portuguese. Link (Portuguese, GS)

Canada

Culture

CBC radio featured a lengthy documentary on Montreal-based publisher, Drawn and Quarterly. Link (22/11/2012, English, BB)

The Montreal Gazette profiles the Drawn and Quarterly bookstore on the occasion of its fifth anniversary. Link (09/11/2012, English, BB)

Also celebrating an anniversary is the legendary Toronto comic book store, The Beguiling, profiled in The National Post on their twenty-fifth anniversary. Link (12/11/2012, English, BB)

In Burlington, Ontario, a public park has been named after cartoonist Doug Wright, the creator of “Doug Wright’s Family” and “Nipper”. Link (06/11/12, English, BB)

Research

A call for papers for the Graphixia, and Comics Grid, Spring Conference 2013: Comics and the Multimodal World, has been posted online. It will take place at Douglas College, Vancouver, between the 13th and 16th of June, 2013. Link (04/10/2012, English, WG)

United States 

Business

Diamond Distribution, Inc. reports sales figures for the top 100 comic titles in October of 2012. Link (29/11/2012, English, HMS)

Diamond Distribution, Inc. reports sales figures for the top 100 graphic novel titles in October of 2012. Link (29/11/2012, English, HMS)

Culture

GeekGirlCon announces 2013 dates of the 19th and 20th of October, 2013, to be held in Seattle Washington. Link (English, HMS)

Heidi MacDonald of Publishers Weekly reports that Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Festival garnered record numbers and attracted notable comics celebrities, including Chris Ware, Art Spiegelman, and Richard MacGuire. Link (12/11/2012, English, HMS)

Jobs

There is a job vacancy for a publishing operations analyst at DC Comics, New York. Link (English, WG)

Law & Politics

Pádraig Ó’Méallóid interviews Alan Moore and discusses the Superfolks dispute for The Comics Beat in three parts, including a case for the prosecution and the defense. Part 1 (25/10/2012), Part 2 (11/11/2012), and Part 3 (18/11/2012, English, HMS))

 Laura Sneddon interviews Grant Morrison, in reply to the Superfolks case and Alan Moore’s statements, for The Comics BeatLink (24/11/2012, English, HMS)

Graeme McMillan of Comicsalliance.com announces that the legal battle between Robert Kirkman and Terry Moore over ownership of The Walking Dead properties has been settled, following three lawsuits. Link (25/09/2012, English, HMS)

Calvin Reid of Publishers Weekly reports that the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund has re-elected Larry Marder president, re-elected Milton Griepp as vice-president, and elected Jeff Abraham as treasurer. Link (20/11/2012, English, HMS)

Robot6 of Comic Book Resources covers the Gaiman Foundation’s $60,000 donation to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund to be used for educational purposes. Link (28/11/2012, English, HMS)

Obituaries

The Comics Beat reports the death of former Wizard Magazine editor Mark “Wilco” Wilkofsky on the 25th of November. Link (English, HMS)

Colin Dabkowski provides the obituary for Buffalo-born underground cartoonist Spain Rodriguez for The Buffalo News. The influential artist passed away on the 28th of November in San Francisco. Link (29/11/2012, English, HMS)

The Comics Beat reports the death of comics artist Josh Medors, a frequent collaborator with Steve Niles, after battling a rare form of spinal cancer. Medors, who helped establish the Help for Heroes charity, passed away on the 29th of November. Link (29/11/2012, English, HMS)

Research

Meredith Schwartz of The Library Journal reports on the partnership between Kansas State University Salina and Kansas Wesleyan University to produce a graphic novel explaining library research methods entitled Legends of the Library NinjasLink (20/11/2012, English, HMS)

The Southwest/Texas Popular Culture and American Culture Association announces a call for papers for its 13th to the 16th February 2013 conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico on the subject of  “Indigenous Deep Space: Indigenous Absence and Presence in Sci-Fi and Comics”. The deadline for submissions has been extended to the 2nd of December. Link (English, HMS)

The Rocky Mountain Conference on Comics and Graphic Novels, held in conjunction with the Denver Comic Con, to be held in Denver between the 28th and 30th of May 2013, announces a call for papers on the subject of “Graphic Art: Violence and Healing in Graphic Novels”. Deadline for submissions is the 1st of March. Link (27/11/2012, English, HMS)

Bob Batchelor, Maja Bajac-Carter, and Norma Jones have issued a call for chapter proposals for an anthology focused on pop culture heroines entitled: “Heroines: Images of Women through Literature and Popular Culture” due by the 15th of January, 2013. Link (20/11/2012, English, HMS)

Asia

Japan

Culture

The Takabatake Kasho Taisho Romanticism Museum in Ehime prefecture, in cooperation with the Kyoto International Manga Museum, is holding a Showa and Taisho Era Bishonen (Beautiful boys) Exhibition until the 11th of February, 2013.  Link (21/10/2012, Japanese, JBS)

The Kitakyushu Municipal Gender Equality Center MOVE is holding a lecture with two manga researchers on the 15th of December. Link (Japanese, JBS)

The Meiji University Yonezawa Yoshihiro Memorial Library is holding a talk show on the late Naiki Toshio and his contributions to manga culture through rental manga, on the 15th December. Link (Japanese, JBS)

Research

The cartoon study group of the Japanese Society for Studies in Cartoon and Comics has its 78th meeting on the 8th December. Link (Japanese, JBS)

The gender study group of the Japanese Society for Studies in Cartoon and Comics has its 19th meeting on the 15th December. Link (Japanese, JBS)

Singapore

Culture

The fifth Anime Festival Asia was held in Singapore from the 9th to 11th of November at the Singapore Expo. Link (English, LCT)

Research

A conference on the teaching of Japanese Popular Culture organised by the Department of Japanese Studies was held at the National University of Singapore from the 11th to 12th Nov. Link (English, LCT)

Europe 

Denmark

Culture

There is an exhibition with new Danish comics art and animation at Gammel Holtegaard between the 16th of November, to the 16th of December. Link (Danish, RPC)

There is an exhibition with comics artist Strid at the Storm P. museum in Copenhagen. Link (02/11/2012, Danish, RPC)

Education

Denmark now has a state approved four year professional bachelors course in graphic storytelling. Link (28/11/2012, English, RPC)

Research

The well reknowned Danish journal, KRITIK, has a theme on comics research with 4 articles on the subject. Link (31/10/2012, Danish, RPC)

Denmark now has three PhDs in comics, Rikke Platz Cortsen successfully defended her thesis. Link (23/11/2012, Danish, RPC) 

Finland

Business

The nordicomics artist in residence recipients have been announced. Link (19/11/2012, English, RPC)

Culture

A Comics Festival in Oulu took place between the 16th and 17th of November. Link (Finnish, RPC)

France

Business

Comics publishing company Casterman is now owned by Gallimard. Through a virulent open letter, notable authors (Bilal, Tardi, etc.) have expressed their worries regarding Casterman’s evolution and editorial policy. Antoine Gallimard has since publicly reiterated his intention not to sell Casterman, as well as his respect for the company and its authors. Link (16/11/2012, French, NL)

Louis Delas steps down as director of Casterman after the company is bought by the publisher Gallimard. Link (08/11/2012, French, LTa)

Louis Delas’ resignation prompted several prominent bande dessinée authors (including  Enki Bilal, Philippe Geluck, François Schuiten, Jacques Tardi, Régis Loisel, Frank Margerin, Benoît Sokal and Jacques de Loustal) to write an open letter to Antoine Gallimard, detailing their concerns over the future of Casterman: they threaten to publish their work elsewhere. Link (13/11/2012, French, LTa)

Culture

The program and selection for the 40th Angoulême Festival were announced on the 17th November. The festival will be held from the 31st January to the 3rd February, 2013 – one week later than usual. Link (27/11/2012, French, NL)

The Official Selection of the 2013 Angoulême Festival has been announced, along with details of the exhibitions taking place as part of the festival. Exhibitions include Uderzo and Jean-Claude Denis retrospectives, in addition to Algerian bande dessinée. Link (27/11/2012, French, LTa)

An André Franquin retrospective exhibition will take place in Paris from the 28th of November 2012 to the 17th of February 2013. Link (21/11/2012, French, LTa)

The Centre Wallonie Bruxelles in Paris is hosting a Franquin exhibit, from the 28th November to the 17th February. The Center’s website includes a downloadable introduction to Franqui (dossier de presse). Link (21/11/2012, French, NL)

On the 9th of December, there will be a major auction of original bande dessinée art, including Tintin, Spirou, Gaston and more, in Paris and Brussels. Link 1Link 2 (26/11/2012, French, LTa)

The magazine Lire has declared Tintin in Tibet the best comic of all time. Link 1 (long article on Tintin au Tibet) Link 2 (details of the Top 10) (23/11/2012, French, LTa)

Law & Politics

Rodolphe & Louis Alloing, who wanted to publish a biography of Edgar P. Jacobs (Blake and Mortimer), won their case against publisher Dargaud, which argued that the book cover was too similar to Jacobs’s style, and Jacobs’s heirs, who disagreed with the way the author was presented. The ruling is consistent with earlier decisions regarding biographies of comics authors. Link (31/10/2012, French, NL)

Research

Benoit Peeters publishes a book of interviews with famed Mangaka Jirô Taniguchi. Link (09/11/2012, French, NL)

Germany

Business

After a hiatus of twelve years, venerable children’s/comics magazine Yps will be published on a quarterly schedule from March 2013. Link (26/11/2012, German, MdlI)

Research

A working group for comics research (AG Comicforschung) has been founded within the Gesellschaft für Medienwissenschaft (Society for Media Studies). Link (German, MdlI)

The proceedings of the conference “Comic: Intermedial & Interdisziplinär” (Bochum 2011) have been published as Comics intermedial (eds. C. A. Bachmann, V. Sina, L. Banhold). Link (German, MdlI)

Greece 

Culture

A comics exhibition – “Bougatsa With Ink” – took place at the French Institute of Thessaloniki from the 22nd-25th November. Link (Greek, LTs)

A collaborative comics storytelling workshop was organised by Comicdom Press, hosted at the Hellenic Institute of International Relations (I.D.I.S.) in Plakain between the 22nd and 24th of November. Link (English, LTs)

Research

A session was dedicated to the relation between Grimm folktales and comics took place during the “ The Brothers Grimm and the folktale: narrations, readings, transformations” conference, at the University of Athens (22nd-24th November). Link (English, LTs)

Ireland

Culture

The winners have been announced for the Irish Comic News Awards 2012. Link (English, SC)

Judge Dredd scribe Michael Carroll will be in store on the 5th of January 2013 signing copies of his latest work in both 2000AD and Judge Dredd Megazine at Sub City Dublin. Link (English, SC)

Irish Comic News shared the poster for the Dublin Comic Market (01/12/2012). Link (English, SC)

Education

Fintin Taite is running 10 weeks of night classes in illustration and cartooning at the Bray Institute of Further Education and Newpark Adult Education Centre in Blackrock. The classes will cover editorial cartooning, picture book illustration, drawing comics, character design, and the practical side of life as a commercial artist. Link (English, SC)

Research

The Postgraduate Faculty of Arts Symposium (University of Ulster, 29th to the 30th of January, 2013), has a call for papers – abstracts from all disciplines (including comics) will be considered. Send any queries or 250 word abstracts to shelleyculbertson21@hotmail.co.uk before the 14th of December.

Romania 

Technology

The first app for reading Romanian comics on both iPhone and Android systems was launched in Bucharest during the Gaudeamus Book Fair. The app’s name is ”Jumatatea Plina” and it will be downloadable for free starting on the 1st January, 2013. Link (21/11/2012, Romanian, MP)

Sweden

Culture

The traveling exhibition on August Strindberg, “Livet är inget för amatörer”, reaches the Sandviken library. Link (28/11/2012, Swedish, RPC)

Comics artist Ninna Hemmingson receives the author Karin Boye’s literary prize. Link (15/11/2012, Swedish, RPC)

Switzerland

Culture

The exhibition “Comics Deluxe! Strapazin – the comics magazine” has been opened at the Cartoonmuseum Basel. Link (10/11/2012, English, MdlI)

UK                 

Culture

Dr Mariko Murata presented a talk on manga museums and their audiences, at Birkbeck, University of London, on the 23rd of November. Link (05/11/2012, English, WG)

Downthetubes hosts a photo review of Thought Bubble 2012, the comics convention which took place in Leeds between the 17th and 18th of November. Link (24/11/2012, English, WG)

The Guardian reports on the two graphic novels (Joff Winterhart’s Days of the Bagnold Summer, and Bryan & Mary Talbot’s Dotter of Her Father’s Eyes) that have been nominated for the Costa Book Awards, 2012 (the first time comic works have been shortlisted). Link (20/11/12, English, WG)

The British Science Festival is seeking artists and writers to collaborate with scientists to create a comic book to be given away at the event. Those wanting to get involved need to fill out an expression of interest form on their website. Link (English, WG)

Research

Graphixia have uploaded a videoblog of some of the conversations that the team had with some of the speakers at Comics Forum, Leeds, 2012 (15th-16th Nov). Link (21/11/2012, English, WG)

*                    *                    *

News Editor: Will Grady (comicsforumnews@hotmail.co.uk)

Correspondents: Lim Cheng Tju (LCT, Singapore), Lida Tsene (LTs, Greece), Lise Tannahill (LTa, France), Shelley Culbertson (SC, Ireland), Rikke Platz Cortsen (RPC, Scandinavia), Jessica Bauwens-Sugimoto (JBS, Japan), Mihaela Precup (MP, Romania), Greice Schneider (GS, Brazil), Hannah Means-Shannon (HMS, North America), William Grady (WG, UK), Bart Beaty (BB, Canada), Martin de la Iglesia (Germany & Switzerland, MdlI), Nicolas Labarre (NL, France).

Click here for News Review correspondent biographies.

Suggestions for articles to be included in the News Review can be sent to Will Grady at the email address above.

 
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Posted by on 2012/12/04 in News Review

 

Visual authentication strategies in autobiographical comics by Elisabeth El Refaie

In 2009 the young French artist Judith Forest published her graphic memoir, 1h25. Using the format of a drawn diary, Judith chronicled her troubled relationship with her parents, her battle against addiction, and her meetings with various well-known personalities in the comics scene. The author gave several media interviews and had a high profile on social networking sites. But then rumours began to surface that Judith Forest did not, in fact, exist. Several of the people mentioned in the book claimed never to have met the woman, and her artistic style was seen to be remarkably similar to that of one of her publishers. These suspicions were apparently confirmed by Forest’s (2010) second book, Momon (‘Masquerade’), which recounts Judith’s response to the success of 1h25 and the controversies it sparked. As more and more doubts about the authenticity of the first book are raised, the autobiographical narrator starts to question her own existence. What if the rumours were true?, Judith asks herself: ‘And what if “sincerity” was nothing more than a sales strategy? And what if autobiography was the whore of literary genres? And what if I had been written in just three days? (p. 96, my translation). The book thus strongly implies what the editors finally admitted at the Angoulême comics festival in 2011: Judith Forest is, indeed, an entirely fictional character, who was played in media interviews by an actress (Brethes 2011).

Fake memoirs have, of course, appeared in other media as well; examples include the bogus literary persona of JT LeRoy and the blog that seemed to be written by a young gay woman in Damascus, but which was actually the creation of the American peace activist Tom MacMaster. Each of these cases raises distinctive questions about the notion of autobiographic authenticity, which relate to their particular socio-political context and their specific form. Since autobiographical comics tell and show events from someone’s life, the issue of authenticity in this medium applies not only to the verbal narration but also to both the content and the style of the visual representations (cf. Beaty 2009; Hatfield 2005). The aim of this article is to identify some of the visual strategies that graphic memoirists may use in order to ‘perform’ authenticity, including the physical resemblance between the author and the narrator/protagonist, the use of a particular style of drawing, and the inclusion of various forms of visual documentation.[1]

My understanding of autobiographical authenticity as a kind of performance draws on Goffman’s (1969[1959]) theory that, whenever we are in the presence of others, we adopt particular strategic roles in order to evoke the desired responses from our audience. According to Goffman, authenticity is not so much about choosing a role which readily accords with our one, true, innermost self; rather, it lies in the choice of the most appropriate roles for the different types of social interaction in which we engage, and in our ability to perform these roles convincingly and with the expected standards of dexterity and coherence. Goffman identifies two different kinds of expressiveness: expressions ‘given’, and expressions ‘given off’. The former involves communication in the traditional, narrow sense of verbal language, whereas the latter involves non-verbal actions such as body language, facial expression, quality of voice, which are perceived by others to be less directly under the actors’ control and which are thus treated as symptomatic of their ‘true’ interests, motives, and identity. In fact, skilled social actors are able to manipulate these non-verbal expressions as well, but most people are less conscious of their effect.

In this article, I will argue that graphic memoirists may be regarded as presenting themselves to their readers in a mediated form of social interaction. Instead of judging an author’s sincerity from his or her spoken words and actions, readers will be looking for signs of the authentic or inauthentic in the text (and sometimes the ‘paratext’ [Genette 1997] as well). I will suggest that visual authentication strategies in comics are likely to be considered as signs ‘given off’ rather than ‘given’ explicitly. Therefore, they are often seen as more reliable cues to authenticity than some of the more overt verbal claims to authenticity, which tend to be treated with scepticism and may sometimes even alert readers to the possibility of deceit or insincerity (Gubrium and Holstein 2009: 125).

Authentication through physical resemblance

Lejeune (1989) famously proposed a straightforward textual criterion by which authors signal that they are prepared to uphold the ‘autobiographical pact’, namely the fact that the author, the narrator, and the protagonist share the same name. In the case of a visual medium such as comics, the authenticity of a work is also judged on the basis of the degree to which the drawings resemble the actual, real-life people they are supposed to represent. Indeed, the visual performance of the autobiographical pact may even be a more important signal of authenticity than its verbal equivalent. Discussing her meeting with Swiss comic book creator Frederik Peeters, for instance, journalist Elizabeth Day (2008) is delighted because she is able to recognize him immediately from the portraits of his autobiographical alter ego, Fred, in his graphic memoir Blue Pills (2008): ‘The same solid angles, slightly hunched shoulders and skewed, quiet smile. The only difference is that he wears spectacles in the drawings and contact lenses in person; rather charmingly, he apologizes for this when we meet.’

In Billy, You and Me, Nicola Streeten’s (2011) graphic memoir about grieving for her two-year-old son, who died suddenly following heart surgery, there is a black and white portrait photograph of the author on the dust jacket of the book, which means that readers are able to compare her self-representations with her photographic image. Despite her simple drawing style, Streeten’s self-portraits bear an obvious resemblance to the woman in the photograph.

Fig 1 – © Nicola Streeten from Billy, Me & You (Myriad Editions, 2011), p. 69. http://www.myriadeditions.com

As this example shows, many comics artists’ self-portraits are deliberately ironic and self-deprecatory, with some comics creators even reverting to overt caricature. Such cartoon drawings can, after all, sometimes reflect the authentic self more successfully than a photograph or a highly realistic portrait ever could: ‘Those who need a truth deeper than similarity (‘he is himself’ rather than ‘he is like himself’) will need to avoid the illusoriness, the blinding, which likeness produces, and approach their prey through the “unlike like”’ (Scott 1999: 236). Streeten’s self-representations, for instance, are able to convey effectively her character traits and shifting states and emotions as she gradually discovers ways of coping with the reality of Billy’s death.

Authentication through visual style

Performed authenticity in comics is a matter not only of visual content, but also of stylistic features, which offer ‘a constant visual reminder of the hand of the illustration artist, much more so than the writer’s traces’ (Carney 2008: 195). Although the visual style of comics is, at least to some extent, under the control of the artist, it is likely to be considered by many readers as a sign ‘given off’ involuntarily rather than one that is chosen entirely consciously and deliberately.

Graphic memoirists often use a style of drawing that quite openly diverges from the styles commonly associated with conventional comic books. In this way, they can indicate their clear intention to tell a different, and, by implication, more genuine and truthful, kind of story. Witek (1989) suggests that non-fictional comics genres are typically cued by a realistic, quasi-photographic style. However, the visual style of graphic memoirists often draws its power less from its iconic resemblance to reality than from the indexical clues it seems to offer about the artist’s genuine characteristics and intentions. As Carney (2008: 196) rightly observes, many ‘alternative’ comics artists ‘infuse their work with a sense of the handmade and personal that deliberately evokes the “subartistic” and “amateurish” as a means of endowing an aura of the authentic and personal to the image and to the narrative voice of the comic.’ In the case of Streeten’s book, for instance, the simple, apparently child-like drawings can be said to suggest the artlessness associated with spontaneity. This impression is reinforced by the fact that many of the pages are drawn on the lined paper of an old diary (see figure 1). In reality, Streeten’s style is, of course, anything but child-like and spontaneous. With many years of experience as an artist and illustrator, Streeten spent several years working to create this intense and thoughtful story about the process of grieving and how it is shaped by social norms, conventions and taboos surrounding death.2

Another good example of ‘deliberate artlessness’ is Lynda Barry’s semi-autobiographical One! Hundred! Demons! (2002). Most of the full-colour pages in the book consist of just two square panels with vivid, quirky drawings and text boxes containing the narrative commentary, handwritten in large capital letters. Each of the chapters is introduced with a double-page collage, made up of scraps of printed or handwritten texts, drawings, photographs, pieces of fabric, buttons, and other objects relating to the topics discussed in the following pages. The opening and concluding pages of the book are painted on lined yellow legal paper. By purposely calling attention to its hand-crafted, artisanal quality and embracing the low cultural status of the mass-produced comics medium (cf. Chute 2010: 113), Barry can be said to be performing a playful and down-to-earth kind of authenticity.

Other graphic memoirists use a drawing style that gives the impression of being free and impulsive, thus allowing them to suggest that they are acting as relatively neutral channels of their own authentic thoughts and feelings. Peeters explained that he drew the story of his relationship with an HIV positive woman directly in ink and consciously did not go back and correct his work: ‘This was something I wanted to do to let go of the thoughts in my head’ (Day 2008). Similarly, Linthout’s (2009) autobiographical comic about a man trying to come to terms with his son’s suicide uses intentionally unpolished pencil drawings, in which all the original sketch lines are still clearly visible beneath the darker outlines of the final drawings. This suggests a grasp of reality that is terribly vulnerable and constantly threatening to dissolve completely, and yet the story feels truthful in terms of the emotional realities it conveys.

Authentication through documentation

Unlike most of the more conventional comics genres, autobiographical comics creators frequently include photographic images and other forms of documentary evidence in their work, either in their original form or in a graphic rendering. The ubiquity of such artefacts in graphic memoirs suggests that they must have a key role to play in persuading readers of the authenticity of a particular work. Again, it seems that many readers are willing to accept such visual authentication strategies as signs of truthfulness ‘given off’ rather than ‘given’ explicitly, since they draw on the intimate link between seeing and believing that is so deeply rooted in our cultural consciousness.

The photograph, in particular, has always been popularly perceived as a singularly objective and reliable medium, with the putative capacity to transcribe reality in the manner of ‘something directly stenciled off the real, like a footprint or a death mask’ (Sontag 2005[1977]: 120). Despite decades of discussions surrounding the problematic relationship between photographs and the ‘truth,’ an inherent belief in the photograph’s direct connection to reality seems to persist. Haverty Rugg (1997: 13) suggests that photography is like autobiography, in that both ‘participate in a system of signs that we have learned to read – at one level – as highly indeterminate and unreliable. Below that level of doubt rests, in some persons, the desire to accept the image or the text as a readable reference to a (once-)living person.’ If anything, the current anxieties surrounding the development of digital photography and the increased awareness of the enhanced possibilities of manipulation appear to have led to an even greater longing for the truly authentic image.

Some graphic memoirists include photographs of themselves and/or family members right at the beginning or the end of the book, while in others they are integrated into the text. In many of these cases, the inclusion of photographs acts as a straightforward ‘sign that we are reading autobiography’ (Adams 2000: 20), in the sense that it seems to ‘insist on something material, the embodied subject, the unification (to recall the autobiographical pact) of author, name, and body’ (Haverty Rugg 1997: 13). But often photographs in graphic memoirs fulfil a more complex role. In Billy, Me & You, for instance, Nicola Streeten includes several of the photographs her partner took after Billy’s death to remind them of the details of their daily life with him, including his toys scattered on the floor and his top lying on the back of the sofa (pp. 18-21). One whole page (p. 72) is given over to a labelled photograph of a pile of objects, including Nicola’s successful pregnancy test, Billy’s favourite bib, the death certificate, and Nicola’s journals, which the couple had compiled into an ‘archive’ and which ‘later became prompts for the telling of our story’ (p. 71). At another point in the story (pp. 86, 88), the artist’s drawings of herself and her partner are overlaid on a collage of photos of London streetscapes, which provide the desolate backdrop to their aimless walks around the hospital while their little boy undergoes surgery, and which also anchor the story firmly in a particular time and place.

Catherine Doherty’s comic book about her search for her birth mother, Can of Worms (2000), and Alison Bechdel’s account of her complicated relationship with her father, Fun Home (2006), both contain extracts from a range of photographs and textual artefacts, which are reinterpreted through the artists’ hand, while carefully preserving the visual appearance of the original documents. Unlike photography, cartooning does not generally claim to offer a direct, mimetic representation of the world but rather an interpretation of events as they are experienced by the artist, with aspects that are often deliberately exaggerated, adapted, or invented. By filtering documentary evidence through their own unique vision, these artists thus draw attention to their own interpretative practices. In Goffman’s (1969 [1959]) terms, they allow readers access to the ‘backstage’ regions of their performance, leading them behind the curtains and showing them all the props, costumes, and masks – or, in other words, the formal and narrative techniques – that were used in the construction of a particular work. Paradoxically, this kind of performance may strike the reader as more rather than less authentic, because it suggests that the graphic memoirist has nothing to hide and is willing to be completely open and honest.

Conclusion

In this article, I have argued that graphic memoirists use a range of visual authentication strategies that are specific to this medium. They allow comics creators to perform their life stories in ways that are likely to strike readers as particularly sincere, because these visual signs appear to be ‘given off’ naturally and spontaneously rather than ‘given’ with deliberate intent, even though they are actually often anything but ‘natural’ and spontaneous.

In my view the deception involved in the presentation of 1h25 as an autobiographical work depended to a large extent upon the close resemblance between the drawings of Judith Forest and the young actress who played her in real life. Even those readers who may have missed the relevant media broadcasts were still able to see the likeness for themselves, because the second book, Mormon, included a still of the actress taken from a program broadcast by the prestigious Arte television channel (p. 56). The relatively simple, sketchy drawing style used in both books also functioned as an effective visual authentication strategy, by indexing the informality and candidness of spur-of-the-moment diary entries. Finally, both 1h25 and Momon contained a range of visual artefacts, including photographs, scanned pictures of newspaper articles, and screen shots of emails and messages posted on Facebook, which appeared to provide further objective evidence and tangible links to the real world. The creators of these fake autobiographies were thus able to exploit the fact that visual authentication strategies are sometimes more likely to be taken ‘at face value’ by readers than explicit verbal claims to authenticity.

References

Adams, T.D. (2000) Light Writing and Life Writing: Photography in Autobiography. Chapter Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press.

Barry, Lynda (2002) One! Hundred! Demons! Sasquatch Books.

Beaty, B. (2009) Autobiography as authenticity. In Heer, Jeet and Worcester, Kent (eds.) A Comics Studies Reader. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi: 226-235.

Bechdel, A. (2006) Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic. London: Jonathan Cape.

Brethes, R. (2011) Canular belge à Angoulême. Le Point.fr 29 January. Available at: http://www.lepoint.fr/culture/canular-belge-a-angouleme-29-01-2011-1289191_3.php (accessed 18.11.2012).

Carney, S. (2008) The ear of the eye, or, do drawings make sounds? English Language Notes 46(2): 193-209.

Chute, H. (2010) Graphic Women: Life Narrative and Contemporary Comics. New York and Chichester, West Sussex: Columbia University Press.

Day, E. (2008) Frame by frame: how to make a cartoon drama out of a crisis. The Observer, 23.3.2008. Available at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/mar/23/culture.features (accessed 20.11.2012).

Doherty, C. (2000) Can of Worms. Seattle, WA: Fantagraphics Books.

Forest, J. (2009) 1h25. Brussels: La Cinquième Couche.

Forest, J. (2010) Momon. Brussels: La Cinquième Couche.

Genette, G. (1997) Paratexts: Thresholds of Interpretation. Translation Jane E. Lewin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Goffman, E. (1969 [1959]) The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin.

Gubrium, J.F. and Holstein, J.A. (2009) The everyday work and auspices of authenticity. In Vannini, P. and Williams, P.J. (eds.) Authenticity in Culture, Self, and Society. Farnham, Surrey and Burlington, VT: Ashgate: 122-138.

Hatfield, C. (2005) Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.

Haverty Rugg, L. (1997) Picturing Ourselves: Photography and Autobiography. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.

Lejeune, P. (1989) On Autobiography. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Linthout, W. (2009) Years of the Elephant. Wisbech: Fanfare Ponent Mon.

Peeters, F. (2008) Blue Pills: A Positive Love Story. London: Jonathan Cape.

Scott, C. (1999) The Spoken Image: Photography & Language. London: Reaktion Books.

Streeten, N. (2011) Billy, Me & You. Brighton: Myriad Editions, p. 69.

Sontag, Susan (2005[1977]) On Photography. New York: RosettaBooks, electronic edition.

Walker, T. (2011) A funny way to deal with death. The Independent, 6.12.2011. Available at: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/a-funny-way-to-deal-with-death-6272731.html (accessed 17.11.2012).

Witek, J. (1989) Comic Books as History: The Narrative Art of Jack Jackson, Art Spiegelman, and Harvey Pekar. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.

Elisabeth (Lisa) El Refaie is a Senior Lecturer at the Centre for Language and Communication Research, Cardiff University. The focus of her research is on new literacies and visual/multimodal forms of metaphor, narrative, and humour. She is the author of Autobiographical Comics: Life Writing in Pictures (2012), and her articles have appeared in several edited volumes and in journals such as Visual Communication, Visual Studies, Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, and Studies in Comics.

[1] – A more detailed exploration of these ideas can be found in El Refaie, E. (2012) Autobiographical Comics: Life Writing in Pictures. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.

[2] – Billy, Me & You was ‘highly commended’ in the 2012 British Medical Association Medical Books Awards.

 
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Posted by on 2012/11/30 in Uncategorized

 

Image [&] Narrative #7: How Lint became a comic strip opera. Interview with Walter Hus by Greice Schneider

Walter Hus (1959) is a composer and pianist. Toured the international scenes in the eighties with the group Maximalist!, and created music for theatre and dance (De Keersmaeker, Vandekeybus, Needcompany…). After his Maximalist! years Hus wrote an oeuvre of operas, concertos, symphonies, string quartets, songs and piano music as well as music for theatre, dance and film (Deruddere, Greenaway, Krüger..). In recent years Hus has been exploring the computer-controlled automatic Decap organs.

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A “comic strip opera”. It was under such intriguing label that I watched a few months ago, a concert based on Lint, by Chris Ware, in Brussels. The spectacle is not really an opera in the traditional sense. It actually consists on a sort of soundtrack performed live – by Spectra Ensemble under Filip Rathé and singer Angélique Willkie – while the book is projected in a wide screen. The man behind such intriguing project is Belgian composer Walter Hus. After being involved in areas so distinct as dance, theatre, films and videogames, Hus decided to explore the potential connections between comics and music, something that Ware has frequently stressed in his interviews.

Let’s start from the beginning. How did you decide to work with comics, and why Chris Ware?

I’m not a real comics reader. I was when I was younger, but I used to read things like Tintin or Suske & Wiske. I was completely crazy for it at that time. When I grew older I’ve never accepted that comics could be considered art. At a certain point my wife became very ill and my whole life came to a standstill. A friend of mine dropped a pile of comic strips for my wife, and while I was also sitting there I looked at them myself and I got Jimmy Corrigan. I was impressed. This was beyond everything I’ve seen up to now. There were things that couldn’t absolutely be done in any other way, opening narrative possibilities that were completely new for me, possibilities of coexistence of several layers, something I was already very intrigued about. What called my attention was the use of counterpoint. In counterpoint, you have something not only linearly going from A to B but also, in the moment itself, with different lines that are independent, which is something very musical. The music of Bach, for instance, is essentially contrapuntal. It sounds beautiful as one, but you can listen to all the separate lines. You have a vertical reading and a horizontal reading, which is typically musical. Towards the centuries there were attempts to incorporate counterpoint, for example, in books containing three stories evolving at the same time, or books that can be opened in whatever point. But with Jimmy Corrigan, I found the perfect adaptation of this principle, going beyond the possibilities.

And how was the project born?

At a certain point I got a commission for the Spectra Ensemble and I could do whatever I wanted. I first proposed to work around Jimmy Corrigan. I have taken a portion of it, around 40 pages, and I made a sort of soundtrack, underlying the story’s psychological mood. After this first project, the Spectra Ensemble said they wanted to go on with the work. And I also wanted to go on, but Jimmy Corrigan is very long. Doing 40 pages was already too long, I couldn’t imagine doing the whole book. And also, I must admit, after a year, this guy, Jimmy Corrigan, got under my skin. He’s so depressive that I had a hard time of convincing myself to do it. At a certain point, I met Chris in New York, for an exhibition of the original drawings of Lint. I found the length of it just perfect. It’s only 66 pages, and it has this fantastic principle of one page per year. I could already imagine making 60 pieces of music, which is more conceivable, every page with its own little composition. I proposed that to the orchestra and they went along with everything. Very soon I started to abandon the principle of composing page by page and I tried to over bridge longer periods of the life of Lint, in a large breathing. But I never went synchronously. I tried to make my own counterpoint, not linked to his counterpoint.

What were the biggest challenges you have faced when working with comics constraints? It’s very different to read a book and to see it projected in a big screen. Jacques Samson made a good point when he said that the spectacle transforms the reader into a spectator.

Yes, it’s not the same when you’re looking at the screen or reading a book. With the book, you can look closer, you can turn it over, you can even use your magnifying glass. You can also spend as much time as you want. First, the dimension is different: the spectacle was performed in a big theater, with a huge projection. It’s immense, and you have to find your way in the scheme. And also the time, which is a very big problem, very hard to resolve. It was me who had to decide on the time the viewers have, which is very hard to find and you’re always frustrated. It’s either too slow and you’re finished already or too fast and you miss something. With Jimmy Corrigan I had a speaker reciting the text, using the same principle as when you are reading for the kids at night. And Chris absolutely loved the music and absolutely hated the voice over. He thinks the voice over is something that broke my music down. It turned my music into wallpaper. He respected the music so much that he didn’t want it to be annihilated by any other voice.

This is a very intriguing point. How did you deal with the problem of duration, how did you decide much time devote to each page?

This is a very hard problem. Each of these pages is like a machine. You can look at them for very long time, but you can also read fast. I think a lot of people do this: you have a first reading, then you go back and reread. Even in the day of the performance I discovered new things. Chris didn’t want to make a heavy thing out of it. He always advised me to accept the fact that you don’t understand things. I found a medium length (a minute, a minute and half per page). I was working together with a dramaturgist and we have often rehearsed the timing together. I tried to reach an average possibility of reading to give the spectator the possibility to grab something (and if you want to read completely you can always buy the book). It was very interesting to hear after the performance the reaction of the people. Each person discovered their own strategy and their own reading experience.

This freedom of wandering through the pages is indeed an important part of reading comics, but that must have been tricky when combining it with music. Were you at any point tempted to guide the audience on where to look at, or to emphasize certain elements?

In the beginning I started with something completely different, in a very risky business. I started to edit the pages, working together with a film editor. We showed an excerpt in Paris for an event at the Centre Pompidou, and it was very much appreciated by the public, who was taken by the hand. But Chris didn’t like it at all. He conceives his pages like that and he wants this feeling of being lost on the page and then finding your own direction. I’m very happy I finally didn’t go in that direction because, in the end, I would have been much busier with editing the film than writing my music. I finally decided to drop this idea, and I got much more freedom. I’m happy for his remark because he saved my skin.

But the public is still guided by the voice over. Some dialogues are transformed into lyrics, performed by singer Angélique Willkie.

Yes, what I’ve done then was to use voice. I thought it was absolutely necessary to have a human element that was like the transfer object between the public and what’s seen in the screen. In the theater context, to leave only the images and the music playing it would mean to abandon he spectator. I didn’t appreciate it. I felt the need for this person, responsible for transference. And I did this also because my music asks for it and because I discovered so beautiful lyrics inside the comics. It’s a completely different kind of lyrics than you hear in normal songs, but still very everyday language. So I’ve left pages without dialogues, pages with dialogues. I’ve adapted different principles in each page. Sometimes little phrases from the page. You stress something, but you leave the freedom for the people to read the rest. If they see that something has been already said, they can concentrate on the rest.

Greice Schneider recently finished a PhD on boredom and everyday life in contemporary graphic narratives at K.U. Leuven, in Belgium. She is a founding member and a member of the editorial board of The Comics Grid. She is on the editorial board of Image [&] Narrative.

Click here to read previous instalments of the Image [&] Narrative column.

 
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Posted by on 2012/11/26 in Image [&] Narrative

 

Sequential Art: Rows by any other name… by Michael D. Picone

Judging from my recollection, the most animated discussion (pun intended) at the Third International Comics Conference (“Comics Rock,” held at Bournemouth University, June 28-29, 2012) took place in the aftermath of the keynote address given by David Lloyd (Kickback, V for Vendetta) and Steve Marchant (The Cartoonist’s Workshop, The Computer Cartoon Kit). That their address was to be, at some level, reactive to a perceived challenge was a foregone conclusion based on the chosen title, “No Artistic Value that Anyone Can See.” There is a double-entendre in that provocative title. On the face of it, the title seems to allude to a dismissive comment made about the value – or, more precisely, the lack thereof – attributed to the entire genre. Yet simultaneously it is a camouflaged assertion, obtained by astutely rewording an opposing sentiment, namely “artistic value that none can see.” That is indeed the crux of the problem, especially for David Lloyd. The genre has an image problem. Ironically, in the same fashion that the Guy Fawkes mask popularized by David Lloyd immobilizes the physiognomy of the protagonist in V for Vendetta behind an incongruously comical smile, the merit of David Lloyd’s own serious artistic production is continually dissimulated, in large part, by virtue of the blanket use of the baggage-laden umbrella term comics to refer to the whole gamut of sequential art, everything from the Sunday funnies to graphic novels of notoriety such as V for Vendetta. It is certainly by design that the objectionable word is absent from the title of the keynote talk. Why continue to tacitly dignify a word, simply by virtue of using it, that one wishes to overthrow? Sequential art is the term David Lloyd would like to promote in its place.

I repeat here something I first mentioned in the discussion that immediately followed that keynote address: Historically speaking, sequential art is not alone in its disrespected misery. In order to thrive and evolve into something of substance, many art forms have gone through a necessary struggle and, in part, a revolt against their own roots before becoming something more than a diversion: fictional writing and film are examples. The process is not easy and the trajectories will not be the same, but sequential art is now pursuing a similar path in attempting to liberate itself from the constraints of its past, as perceived in the public eye. Of course the parameters of this problem are not the same in every country where sequential art has had prominence. For example, though usually not accorded the same standing as works of literary prose or poetry, there is nevertheless widespread acceptance of bande dessinée as a worthy art form in Francophone Europe.

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Posted by on 2012/11/23 in Guest Writers

 

Laydeez do Comics Leeds launch

Laydeez do Comics Leeds is a graphic novel forum with a focus on comic works based on life narrative, the drama of the domestic and the everyday. EVERYONE…men and women…welcome to the bi-monthly meetings, the first of which is happening on Monday 26 November, 6.30pm-9.30pm at Wharf Chambers, 23-25 Wharf Street, Leeds LS2 7EQ. Tickets are priced £1.50 and refreshments are available from the reasonably priced bar. Whether you are new to comics or already a fan, the evening includes short presentations from guest speakers and offers an inspiring experience in a social atmosphere.

Guest speakers at this inaugural meeting are Steve Tillotson, Griselda Pollock and Nicola Streeten. Steve Tillotson is an artist and co-founder of the Leeds Alternative Comics Fair. He is also runner-up in this year’s Observer/Jonathan Cape/Comica Short Story Prize 2012 (which means that he actually came second, because this prize identifies one winner and one runner-up). Griselda Pollock is Professor of Social and Critical Histories of Art, University of Leeds. Writing on feminist theory and visual culture, her forthcoming books include A Name for Myself: Charlotte Salomon’s Theatre of Memory 1941-42. Nicola Streeten is an artist and author of the award winning graphic novel Billy, Me & You. She is also co-founder of Laydeez do Comics.

The original Laydeez do Comics launched July 2009 in London, set up by Nicola in collaboration with the artist and curator Sarah Lightman. It is the first women led graphic novel forum in the UK. Artists, academics, publishers and fans from around the world are invited to speak. It is a platform for people to test new works and ideas, where emerging artists present their work alongside more established practitioners. Each month the meetings are recorded by invited guest bloggers.

Laydeez do Comics Leeds is a sister branch of the original Laydeez do Comics. There’s also a sister branch in San Francisco. You can find out more, including recordings of past talks by guest speakers, drawings by guest bloggers and lots of useful comics related links at http://www.laydeezdocomics.com/.

Louise Crosby and Helen Iball

Laydeez do Comics Leeds

 
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Posted by on 2012/11/21 in News, Women, Women in Comics