Visual Metaphor and Embodiment in Graphic Illness Narratives

Visual Metaphor and Embodiment in Graphic Illness Narratives
ISBN-10
0190678178
ISBN-13
9780190678173
Category
Autobiographical comic books, strips, etc
Pages
216
Language
English
Published
2019-01-10
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Author
Elisabeth El Refaie

Description

Metaphors help us understand abstract concepts, emotions, and social relations through the concrete experience of our own bodies. Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT), which dominates the field of contemporary metaphor studies, is centered on this claim. According to this theory, correlations in the way the world is perceived in early childhood (e.g., happy/good is up, understanding is seeing) persist in our conceptual system, influencing our thoughts throughout life at a mostly unconscious level. What happens, though, when ordinary embodied experience is disrupted by illness? In this book, Elisabeth El Refaie explores how metaphors change according to our body's alteration due to disease. She analyzes visual metaphor in thirty-five graphic illness narratives (book-length stories about disease in the comics medium), re-examining embodiment in traditional CMT and proposing the notion of "dynamic embodiment." Building on recent strands of research within CMT and engaging relevant concepts from phenomenology, psychology, semiotics, and media studies, El Refaie demonstrates how the experience of our own bodies is constantly adjusting to changes in our individual states of health, socio-cultural practices, and the modes and media by which we communicate. This fundamentally interdisciplinary work also proposes a novel classification system of visual metaphor, based on a three-way distinction between pictorial, spatial, and stylistic metaphors. This approach will enable readers to advance knowledge and understanding of phenomena involved in shaping our everyday thoughts, interactions, and behavior.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Persepolis: Del 1
    By Marjane Satrapi

    An intelligent and outspoken only child, Satrapi--the daughter of radical Marxists and the great-granddaughter of Iran's last emperor--bears witness to a childhood uniquely entwined with the history of her country.

  • 페르세폴리스
    By Marjane Satrapi

    Persepolis is the story of Marjane Satrapi's childhood and coming of age within a large and loving family in Tehran during the Islamic Revolution; of the contradictions between private life and public life in a country plagued by political ...

  • How I Tried to Be a Good Person
    By Ulli Lust

    Lust's follow-up to her first internationally lauded graphic memoir, How I Tried to Be a Good Person, picks up directly where its predecessor left off.

  • Our Super Adventure: Travelogue Collection : America and Canada
    By Sarah Graley, Stef Purenins

    Our Super Adventure: Travelogue Collection : America and Canada

  • Suddenly Something Happened
    By Jimmy Beaulieu

    Told in richly rendered pencil lines in front of masterfully drawn backdrops portraying Quebec's urban and rural landscapes, these are the complete non-adventures of Jimmy Beaulieu, an easy going artist with an appreciation for the finer ...

  • The Book of Sarah
    By Sarah Lightman

    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.

  • Life of the Party
    By Mary Fleener

    Fleener is a reluctant medium, a trippy cubist, a party girl with a brain.

  • Never Ending Summer
    By Allison Cole

    A semi-autobiographical hallucinatory tour that follows a group of friends through a summer filled with uncertainty and confusion.

  • Stripped
    By Peter Kuper

    Stripped

  • Sunday in the Park with Boys
    By Jane Mai

    "A poetic account of self-discovery and self-loathing"--Amazon.com.