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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/20571
Title: Queer Theory, Biopolitics, and the Risk of Representation: Looking to or From the Margins in Contemporary Graphic Novels
Authors: Froese, Jocelyn Sakal
Advisor: Attewell, Nadine
Department: English and Cultural Studies
Keywords: queer theory, comics, graphic novels, biopolitics, visual studies, comics theory,
Publication Date: 2016
Abstract: In my dissertation, I bring together the fields of comics theory, biopolitics, and queer theory in order to read contemporary coming-of-age graphic novels that represent characters (and sometimes lives) at the margins. Coming-of-age graphic novels in this category often depict complex engagements with trauma and history, and couple those depictions with the loss of attachments: the subjects represented in these texts usually do not belong. I make a case for productive spaces inside of the unbelonging represented in my chosen texts. In Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home, Alison finds multiple nodes of attachment with her deceased father through the process of writing his history. Importantly, none of those attachments require that she forgive him for past violences, or that she overwrite his life in order to shift focus onto the positive. Jillian and Mariko Tamaki’s Skim features a protagonist, Skim, who is rendered an outcast because of her body, her hobbies, and eventually her process of mourning. Skim carves out a life that is survivable for her, and resists the compulsion to perform happiness while she does it. Charles Burns’s Black Hole depicts a group of teens who are excommunicated from their suburb after contracting a disfiguring, sexually transmitted disease, and who take to the woods in order to build a miniature, ad-hoc society for themselves. I concentrate on the question of precarity, and notice that safety and stability have a strong correlation with gender and sexuality: women and queers are overrepresented at the margins.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/20571
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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