Follow us:
  DR. BICKMORE'S YA WEDNESDAY
  • Wed Posts
  • PICKS 2025
  • Con.
  • Mon. Motivators 2025
  • WEEKEND PICKS 2024
  • Weekend Picks 2021
  • Contributors
  • Bickmore's Posts
  • Lesley Roessing's Posts
  • Weekend Picks 2020
  • Weekend Picks 2019
  • Weekend Picks old
  • 2021 UNLV online Summit
  • UNLV online Summit 2020
  • 2019 Summit on Teaching YA
  • 2018 Summit
  • Contact
  • About
  • WEEKEND PICKS 2023
    • WEEKEND PICKS 2023
  • Bickmore Books for Summit 2024

 

Check out our weekly posts!

Stay Current

Art in Literature/Literature in Art: Notes on 3 Exceptional Works of YA Graphica by Stacy Graber

12/4/2019

 
It is a busy time from many of us. Some of us had a busy week at NCTE and ALAN. Then a quick break to visit family for the Thanksgiving break. I hope all of you survived. If you did, and you work at a university,  you realize that you now have a final couple of weeks of classes and grading. I know that I do.

I appreciated Stacy Graber's willingness to produce a blog post. Whenever I need to remind myself to think deeply, I know that I can be inspired by any Stacy has to say. Before reading her current post you might want to check out some of her earlier contributions. They can be easily found by visiting the contributors page. 

Art in Literature/Literature in Art:
​Notes on 3 Exceptional Works of YA Graphica:
Carroll’s Through the Woods, Kuper’s Kafkaesque, and Small’s Home After Dark.

According to McCloud’s (1993) classic text, Understanding Comics, we better appreciate comics or sequential art when we comprehend the unity between art and text.  Meaning, we should not think about the components of graphica in a compartmentalized sense but rather in harmony, as a whole.  Similar to Derrida’s argument regarding the cultural privileging of certain forms (e.g., speech prioritized over writing), McCloud (1993) contends that words are privileged over pictures and that such hierarchic thinking sets up a bias toward one part of the binary/pair (p. 140), which has resulted in a general demotion or trivializing of the comic artform.  
Picture
​What is the takeaway from this philosophical argument for teachers invested in exploring a range of adolescent literacies in the secondary classroom?  We must understand how graphic texts work so we can conduct technical conversations on par with the traditional, literary ones we are accustomed to facilitating in order to authentically honor diverse forms of communication.  That said, I will propose a short list of exceptional (i.e., beautifully rendered, rich, evocative, etc.) works of YA graphica and offer remarks on how these books work in order to account for the fusion of art and literature.       
David Small, Home After Dark (2018)
​What Small does through a few panels is akin to the technical feat in the opening sequence of David Lynch’s (1986) Blue Velvet.  That is, he zooms in closer and closer to the writhing, decaying, and squalid underside of life in all its sinister brutality.  At the same time, paradoxically, Small’s book depicts the astonishing kindness of individuals who love, forgive, and offer sanctuary.  These binaries are established through truncated bits of talk and chiaroscuro pen and ink drawings.  On one hand, Small renders a world from the most extreme grotesqueries; on the other hand, he [also] holds out the possibility of saintliness and grace.  And, between these oppositions, Small’s youthful narrator inhabits a kind of non-place through which he attempts to navigate toward some semblance of security if not wholeness.   
Picture
Key to the relationship between image and text in Small’s book is the cinematic and literary allusion base he draws from, implicitly and explicitly, to convey the texture of experience.  For example, as mentioned previously, the technique of exposing the seamy underside of midcentury America takes a page out of Lynch’s book, in addition to an homage to Polanski’s (1965) Repulsion found in the warping effects of isolation.  And, in terms of tracing a literary lineage, aside from the direct reference to Holden Caulfield in the narrator’s wish to live without interference among the Eskimos, Home After Dark seemingly owes a debt to Conrad’s (1899-1900) Lord Jim related to the protagonist’s catastrophic failure of nerve.  But the real literary deity presiding over Small’s graphic novel is Joyce Carol Oates in terms of the lurid details of true crime and unflinching portraiture of the darkest impulses in our friends and neighbors.  
​The bildungsroman is ultimately defined by a sense of grotesque initiation transmitted through a series of progressively more disturbing POV shots.  For instance, the world is revealed as vicious in a community’s collective commission of a homophobic hate crime, and diabolical in the grisly remains left by an animal serial killer.  No wonder one of the great chroniclers of childhood, Jack Gantos, praised Small’s capacity for wordlessly rendering the “inchoate chaos of youth.”   
Emily Carroll, Through the Woods (2014)
Marina Warner argues that fairy tales are best understood through their social and historical context rather than through a psychoanalytic or archetypal lens (University of Sheffield, 2017).  This is because fairy tales express something specific about their moment of production.  Therefore, if we know something of the temporal conflicts informing the literature, that information provides insight into the storyteller’s perspective (Warner as cited in University of Sheffield, 2017).
In Emily Carroll’s modernized fairy tale collection titled, Through the Woods, we observe many of the evocations familiar to the genre (e.g., elements of the supernatural, antagonistic forces of good and evil, questioning of hierarchic systems, etc.) at work in a universe with a different sensibility, one more critical of the limited agency of women (although the outcome of the tales would not be characterized as sunny).  A feminist-inflected yet ambivalent perspective comes through especially in two tales: a retelling of “Bluebeard” titled, “A Lady’s Hands Are Cold,” and “My Friend Janna,” which reads like a cautionary tale set in the context of a con. 
Picture
In “A Lady’s Hands Are Cold,” the principal character functions passively as a piece of property until she is hailed on an errand of vengeance by a former wife and victim of the serial killer husband.  Guided by a morbid systematics—in the style of Shelley’s (1818) Frankenstein—the current wife pieces together the dismembered parts of a former wife while assembling clues to the mystery of the past and likely future.  No brothers arrive as saviors in this iteration of the classic tale; rather, the catalyst to change is the seeming transmigration of one wife into another, but the precise object of retribution is unknown.  In “My Friend Janna,” two young girls, guided by boredom and condescension, con the inhabitants of a town ravenous for communion with the dead.  And, as might be expected in a tale blurring ethical and supernatural dimensions, their ruse exacts a cost.  A kind of terrifying force envelopes the tricksters, the mark of an encounter with an incomprehensible source of power, and their bond alters from shared secret to joint curse.
​​
In both of these tales, Carroll uses color for narrative and expressionistic effect.  Meaning, color (e.g., red, blue, green, orange, white, and black) advances the elements of characterization and plot and offers an emotional vocabulary for expressing facets of experience that could not be conveyed as viscerally by realistic methods.  An example of this would be a close-up montage sequence featuring bloody utensils, the reddened lips and teeth of the serial killer husband gnawing a slice of rare meat, and the cherry-ribbon choker worn by the wife—implying her as quarry (Carroll, 2014).  Likewise, instances of aporia posed within the narratives defy logic and impart a sense of anxiety over ever resolving existential conflicts.  Perhaps Carroll is suggesting that we still contend with gender-based struggle and have not moved much closer toward resolution since the time of the Brothers Grimm. 
Peter Kuper, Kafkaesque (2018)
Could Kafka—the shy bureaucrat who invested years working for the Workers’ Accident Insurance Institute for the Kingdom of Bohemia in Prague —ever have imagined that his writing would be at the center of a range of international legal and academic battles?  I am referring not only to the controversy concerning ownership of the cache of materials produced by the writer as delineated by Balint (2018), but also the debates surrounding the impact of translation on our understanding of Kafka’s content and style (e.g., ranging from the Muir to Hofmann translations (Woods, 2014)).
​Interestingly, the comic artist/illustrator Peter Kuper (2018) built this context of conflict into his graphic representation of 14 classic short stories by Kafka by selecting a “stripped down” palette of language to more faithfully transmit the author’s tone, syntax, and commentary on the fragmentary, alienating experience of modern life (Kuper, 2018, pp. 9-10).  Kuper makes provocative decisions for visually rendering the stories, which may better convey the themes, motifs, and preoccupations spanning the oeuvre.  One of the best examples of this would be the strange, hybridized creature Kuper draws to dramatize action in Kafka’s story titled, “The Burrow.”  The mole-man in the drawings has the body of an insectivore and the face a person.  Additionally, he watches television on a flat-screen TV, consumes commercially produced food, grocery shops in a supermarket, and demonstrates many attributes indicative of human versus animal life (e.g., paranoia and miserliness).  Throughout the narrative, mole-man rhapsodizes on the joys of home ownership and boasts about defense of his property.  And, in time, he comes to appear much more like a member of a Board of Directors for an HOA than a fossorial animal, obsessed as he is with protecting against home invasion and keeping up with home improvements.  In this way, the story functions, for a contemporary audience, as a residential allegory on the fear of encroachment by “others.”
Picture
Kuper makes yet another controversial, aesthetic decision in his rendering of Kafka’s story “The Trees,” by representing the speaker as a homeless person and shifting the locus of imagery from forest to city.  Perhaps readers might object to the liberty taken here with the original text, but the visuals are fitting in that they convey the central paradox/riddle of the story: What appears immovable yet may actually come unfixed with ease?  In Kuper’s inky, scratchboard drawings, the inert bodies of the homeless are subject to administrative removal and the tone of this ruthless action reflects the mournful dispossession of all outcasts, which surely reifies Kafka’s vision.
​
In closing, there are many, fine graphic works produced for a young adult audience, and we need to engage in public conversations—like this one—to show our students entry points for interpretation and debate.         
Selected References
​

Balint, B.  (2018).  Kafka’s last trial: The case of a literary legacy.  New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company.
Carroll, E.  (2014).  Through the woods.  New York, NY: Margaret K. McElderry Books. 
Kuper, P.  (2018).  Kafkaesque: Fourteen stories.  New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company.
McCloud, S.  (1993).  Understanding comics.  New York, NY: HarperCollins.
Small, D.  (2018).  Home after dark.  New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company.
University of Sheffield.  (2017).  In conversation with Dame Marina Warner: On Fairytales [Video file].  Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKSeHHgzjns
Woods, M.  (2014).  Kafka translated: How translators have shaped our reading of Kafka.  New York, NY: Bloomsbury Academic.
 
Biographical Statement: Stacy Graber is an Associate Professor of English at Youngstown State University.  Her areas of interest include critical theory, pedagogy, and popular culture. 
Until next time.
Britni Oscar link
5/5/2020 02:02:06 am

i need guest post on your site
Do you accept guest posts? If yes, I'll provide you a well-written article and 100% related to your website niche:
http://www.yawednesday.com/blog/art-in-literatureliterature-in-art-notes-on-3-exceptional-works-of-ya-graphica-by-stacy-graber
Looking forward to a positive response.

Regard


Comments are closed.

    Dr. Steve Bickmore
    ​Creator and Curator

    Dr. Bickmore is a Professor of English Education at UNLV. He is a scholar of Young Adult Literature and past editor of The ALAN Review and a past president of ALAN. He is a available for speaking engagements at schools, conferences, book festivals, and parent organizations. More information can be found on the Contact page and the About page.
    Dr. Gretchen Rumohr
    Co-Curator
    Gretchen Rumohr is a professor of English and writing program administrator at Aquinas College, where she teaches writing and language arts methods.   She is also a Co-Director of the UNLV Summit on the Research and Teaching of Young Adult Literature. She lives with her four girls and a five-pound Yorkshire Terrier in west Michigan.

    Bickmore's
    ​Co-Edited Books

    Picture
    Meet
    Evangile Dufitumukiza!
    Evangile is a native of Kigali, Rwanda. He is a college student that Steve meet while working in Rwanda as a missionary. In fact, Evangile was one of the first people who translated his English into Kinyarwanda. 

    Steve recruited him to help promote Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media while Steve is doing his mission work. 

    He helps Dr. Bickmore promote his academic books and sometimes send out emails in his behalf. 

    You will notice that while he speaks fluent English, it often does look like an "American" version of English. That is because it isn't. His English is heavily influence by British English and different versions of Eastern and Central African English that is prominent in his home country of Rwanda.

    Welcome Evangile into the YA Wednesday community as he learns about Young Adult Literature and all of the wild slang of American English vs the slang and language of the English he has mastered in his beautiful country of Rwanda.  

    While in Rwanda, Steve has learned that it is a poor English speaker who can only master one dialect and/or set of idioms in this complicated language.

    Archives

    February 2025
    January 2025
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    June 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014

    Categories

    All
    Chris-lynch

    Blogs to Follow

    Ethical ELA
    nerdybookclub
    NCTE Blog
    yalsa.ala.org/blog/

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly