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Academics reading and celebrating the style, substance, and sublimity of all kinds of comics. By scholars, for everyone. Led by @peppard_anna & @ClaremontRun.

May 6, 2023, 13 tweets

Many scholars have argued that comics are inherently suited to—and have indeed helped innovate—approaches to life writing that self-reflexively interrogate the act of life writing. Kate Beaton’s “Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands” deftly exploits this tradition. #ducks 1/13

Comics autobio was key to changing the public perception of comics in North America. When Art Spiegelman’s “Maus” won a Pulitzer in 1992, there was finally broad acceptance of something comics creators & fans always knew: comics can address serious topics with great artistry 2/13

The popularity and critical praise for graphic novels like Marjane Satrapi’s “Persepolis” (2004) and Alison Bechdel’s ”Fun Home” (2006) similarly expanded people’s appreciation for what comics are and what they can do, including things they can’t do that other mediums can’t. 3/13

In an interview with comics scholar Hillary L. Chute, Spiegelman says: “comics is the only form in which past, present, and future are visible simultaneously… left is the past, and to its right is the future. And your perception of the present moves across it.” 4/13

In other words, comics are ideal for reflecting on the ways the past affects the present and vice versa, and the unpredictability of those affects, which comics creators can signpost but are always, in part, dependent on the subjective interpretation of the reader. 5/13

In this symmetrically composed page from “Ducks,” Beaton combines specific, albeit subjective, images from her own history (redrawn family photos) with more symbolic settings & first-person narration to show the interconnection of personal, cultural, and political histories. 6/13

The simultaneity of past & present helps us see how the history of Cape Breton impacts Beaton’s decisions and self perception, both in terms of her past self & her present self’s perception of her past self. This honest admission of the limits of perception engenders trust. 7/13

Chute also argues comics autobio is especially adept at representing underrepresented perspectives, including the perspectives of women. For Chute, this is linked to the ways comics let women design images of themselves that reflect their subjectivity & resist the male gaze. 8/13

Beaton’s depiction of herself is sophisticatedly simplistic, specific enough to be instantly recognizable yet universal in ways that encourage empathy. And its never objectified, which is crucial to the comic’s treatment of sexual violence (more on that in a future thread). 9/13

According to Chute, comics memoirs by women can “productively point to the female subject as both an object of looking and a creator of looking and sight. Further… they provoke us to think about how women… are situated in particular times, spaces, and histories.” 10/13

“Ducks” is centrally concerned with the construction of gender. Narratively, Beaton confronts being a woman in an isolated, male-dominated space. Formally, she repeatedly stages the spectacle of femininity while focusing on the emotional effects of that spectacularization. 11/13

The frequent close-cropping of Beaton’s face & the simplicity of her design of herself, which makes each carefully chosen expression line hit harder, underscores subjectivity and solicits identification. We see and feel the tension between (relative) innocence & experience. 12/13

In some ways, Beaton’s “Ducks” is less visually challenging than Spiegelman’s “Maus” or Bechdel’s “Fun Home.” But it’s style exactly suits its goals, which is to represent Beaton’s self and perception of herself, then and now, and help us embrace the truth of her story. 13/13

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