Literature DB >> 26435175

Graphic Somatography: Life Writing, Comics, and the Ethics of Care.

Amelia DeFalco1.   

Abstract

This essay considers the ways in which graphic caregiving memoirs complicate the idealizing tendencies of ethics of care philosophy. The medium's "capacious" layering of words, images, temporalities, and perspectives produces "productive tensions. . . The words and images entwine, but never synthesize" (Chute 2010, 5). In graphic memoirs about care, this "capaciousness" allows for quick oscillation between the rewards and struggles of care work, representing ambiguous, even ambivalent attitudes toward care. Graphic memoirs effectively represent multiple perspectives without synthesis, part of a structural and thematic ambivalence that provides a provocative counterpart to the abstract idealism of ethics of care philosophy.

Keywords:  Caregiving; Comics; Disability; Ethics of care philosophy; Illness; Life writing

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26435175     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-015-9360-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  2 in total

1.  Autography as auto-therapy: psychic pain and the graphic memoir.

Authors:  Ian Williams
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2011-12

2.  Literature and medicine, future tense: making it graphic.

Authors:  Susan M Squier
Journal:  Lit Med       Date:  2008
  2 in total

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