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In this groundbreaking collection of essays, interviews, and
artwork, contributors draw upon a rich treasure trove of Jewish
women’s comics to explore the representation of Jewish women’s
bodies and bodily experience in pictorial narratives. Spanning
national, cultural, and artistic borders, the essays shine a light
on the significant contributions of Jewish women to comics. The
volume includes major figures such as Miriam Katin, Emil Ferris,
Aline Kominsky-Crumb, and Rutu Modan alongside works by artists
translated for the first time into English, such as the Georgian
Nino Biniashvili and the Haredi artist Batsheva Havlin. Exploring
topics such as family, motherhood, miscarriages, queerness, gender
and Judaism, illness, war, and the lingering impact of the
Holocaust, the contributors present unique, at times deeply
personal, insights into how Jewishness intersects with other forms
of identity and identification. In doing so, the volume deepens our
understanding of Jewish women’s experiences.
In this groundbreaking collection of essays, interviews, and
artwork, contributors draw upon a rich treasure trove of Jewish
women's comics to explore the representation of Jewish women's
bodies and bodily experience in pictorial narratives. Spanning
national, cultural, and artistic borders, the essays shine a light
on the significant contributions of Jewish women to comics. The
volume includes major figures such as Miriam Katin, Emil Ferris,
Aline Kominsky-Crumb, and Rutu Modan alongside works by artists
translated for the first time into English, such as the Georgian
Nino Biniashvili and the Haredi artist Batsheva Havlin. Exploring
topics such as family, motherhood, miscarriages, queerness, gender
and Judaism, illness, war, and the lingering impact of the
Holocaust, the contributors present unique, at times deeply
personal, insights into how Jewishness intersects with other forms
of identity and identification. In doing so, the volume deepens our
understanding of Jewish women's experiences.
The Book of Sarah is missing from the bible, so artist Sarah
Lightman sets out to make her own: questioning religion, family,
motherhood and what it takes to be an artist in this quietly
subversive visual autobiography from NW3. The Jerusalem Bible,
Ellerdale Road, St Paul's Girls School and a baby monitor: books
and streets, buildings and objects ll this bildungsroman set in
Hampstead, North West London. Sarah Lightman has been drawing her
life since she was a 22-year-old undergraduate at The Slade School
of Art. The Book of Sarah traces her journey from modern Jewish
orthodoxy to a feminist Judaism, as she searches between the
complex layers of family and family history that she inherited and
inhabited. While the act of drawing came easily, the letting go of
past failures, attachments and expectations did not. It is these
that form the focus of Sarah's astonishingly beautiful pages, as we
bear witness to her making the world her own.
The comics within capture in intimate, often awkward, but always
relatable detail the tribulations and triumphs of life. In
particular, the lives of 18 Jewish women artists who bare all in
their work, which appeared in the internationally acclaimed
exhibition "Graphic Details: Confessional Comics by Jewish Women."
The comics are enhanced by original essays and interviews with the
artists that provide further insight into the creation of
autobiographical comics that resonate beyond self, beyond gender,
and beyond ethnicity.
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