Department or Program
English
Abstract
Recent years have seen a rise in nonfiction graphic novels that deal with traumatic experiences and their impacts that defy ordinary processes of thought and communication. From the repressive traumatic silence of familial pain to the widespread trauma shared by communities in times of conflict and brutal bloodshed, the focus of these works are served well by the visual- verbal form of the genre. This thesis examines the ways in which the graphic novel form successfully represents trauma by bringing together two subgenres: the memoiristic graphic novel and the journalistic graphic novel. Looking specifically at Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home, Joe Sacco’s Safe Area Goražde, and Art Spiegelman’s In The Shadow of No Towers, it combines trauma theory and literary comic criticism to investigate the way the form works to articulate the psychoanalytic conditions of traumatic experience and memory. By engaging a parallel analysis of the two subgenres, this thesis also examines how the form enables meaningful representation of widespread catastrophe and its effects through the focus on personal narrative and testimony. The form works well to continue the documentary work of photojournalism, reframing large- scale trauma in terms of a more granular “human” scale through the narrative lens of individual experience. Comics such Sacco’s represent that which is largely overlooked and perhaps ultimately unrepresentable in the media archives of disasters, war, and violent conflicts, generating an imaginary archive that personalizes the political. Conversely, the memoiristic graphic novel’s anti-realism works to de-privatize personal histories of family trauma making visible what is otherwise unsayable.
Level of Access
Restricted: Campus/Bates Community Only Access
First Advisor
Osucha, Eden
Date of Graduation
5-2017
Degree Name
Bachelor of Arts
Recommended Citation
Harling, Katharina, "Finding Closure: Trauma Narratives in Graphic Literatures" (2017). Honors Theses. 204.
https://scarab.bates.edu/honorstheses/204
Number of Pages
174
Restricted
Available to Bates community via local IP address or Bates login.