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Redrawing the Historical Past examines how multiethnic graphic
novels portray and revise U.S. history. This is the first
collection to focus exclusively on the interplay of history and
memory in multiethnic graphic novels. Such interplay enables a new
understanding of the past. The twelve essays explore Mat Johnson
and Warren Pleece's Incognegro, Gene Luen Yang's Boxers and Saints,
GB Tran's Vietnamerica, Cristy C. Road's Spit and Passion, Scott
McCloud's The New Adventures of Abraham Lincoln, Art Spiegelman's
post-Maus work, and G. Neri and Randy DuBurke's Yummy: The Last
Days of a Southside Shorty, among many others. The collection
represents an original body of criticism about recently published
works that have received scant scholarly attention. The chapters
confront issues of history and memory in contemporary multiethnic
graphic novels, employing diverse methodologies and approaches
while adhering to three main guidelines. First, using a global
lens, contributors reconsider the concept of history and how it is
manifest in their chosen texts. Second, contributors consider the
ways in which graphic novels, as a distinct genre, can formally
renovate or intervene in notions of the historical past. Third,
contributors take seriously the possibilities and limitations of
these historical revisions with regard to envisioning new,
different, or even more positive versions of both the present and
future. As a whole, the volume demonstrates that graphic novelists
use the open and flexible space of the graphic narrative page-in
which readers can move not only forward but also backward, upward,
downward, and in several other directions-to present history as an
open realm of struggle that is continually being revised.
Filthy Fictions addresses Asian American literature by women to
explore and explode the sedimented and solidified meanings we have
created about "Asian Americans" and "dirt" through dialogues that
not only cross disciplinary and institutional formations and
borders, but also question the very borders and territories upon
which these arguments may be founded. Expertly questioning the
construction of the ethnic body, the book discusses critical
discourses in ethnic and feminist studies around the topic of
identity (re)production and transnational representation.
Filthy Fictions addresses Asian American literature by women to
explore and explode the sedimented and solidified meanings we have
created about 'Asian Americans' and 'dirt' through dialogues that
not only cross disciplinary and institutional formations and
borders, but also question the very borders and territories upon
which these arguments may be founded. Expertly questioning the
construction of the ethnic body, the book discusses critical
discourses in ethnic and feminist studies around the topic of
identity (re)production and transnational representation.
In Show Me Where It Hurts, Monica Chiu argues that graphic
pathography—long-form comics by and about subjects who suffer
from disease or are impaired—re-vitalizes and re-visions various
negatively affected corporeal states through hand-drawn images. By
the body and for the body, the medium is subversive and reparative,
and it stands in contradistinction to clinical accounts of illness
that tend to disembody or objectify the subject. Employing affect
theory, spatial theory, vital materialism, and approaches from race
and ethnic studies, women and gender studies, disability studies,
and comics studies, Chiu provides readings of recently published
graphic pathography. Chiu argues that these kinds of subjective
graphic stories, by virtue of their narrative and descriptive
strengths, provide a form of resistance to the authoritative voice
of biomedicine and serve as a tool to foster important change in
the face of social and economic inequities when it comes to
questions of health and healthcare. Show Me Where It Hurts reads
what already has been manifested on the comics page and invites
more of what demands expression. Pathbreaking and provocative, this
book will appeal to scholars and students of the medical
humanities, comics studies, race and ethnic studies, disability
studies, and women and gender studies.
Redrawing the Historical Past examines how multiethnic graphic
novels portray and revise U.S. history. This is the first
collection to focus exclusively on the interplay of history and
memory in multiethnic graphic novels. Such interplay enables a new
understanding of the past. The twelve essays explore Mat Johnson
and Warren Pleece's Incognegro, Gene Luen Yang's Boxers and Saints,
GB Tran's Vietnamerica, Cristy C. Road's Spit and Passion, Scott
McCloud's The New Adventures of Abraham Lincoln, Art Spiegelman's
post-Maus work, and G. Neri and Randy DuBurke's Yummy: The Last
Days of a Southside Shorty, among many others. The collection
represents an original body of criticism about recently published
works that have received scant scholarly attention. The chapters
confront issues of history and memory in contemporary multiethnic
graphic novels, employing diverse methodologies and approaches
while adhering to three main guidelines. First, using a global
lens, contributors reconsider the concept of history and how it is
manifest in their chosen texts. Second, contributors consider the
ways in which graphic novels, as a distinct genre, can formally
renovate or intervene in notions of the historical past. Third,
contributors take seriously the possibilities and limitations of
these historical revisions with regard to envisioning new,
different, or even more positive versions of both the present and
future. As a whole, the volume demonstrates that graphic novelists
use the open and flexible space of the graphic narrative page-in
which readers can move not only forward but also backward, upward,
downward, and in several other directions-to present history as an
open realm of struggle that is continually being revised.
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