Affiliation:
1. Manchester Museum, University of Manchester
2. Bournemouth University
Abstract
This editorial introduces the special collection Conjuring a New Normal: Monstrous Routines and Mundane Horrors in Pandemic Lives and Dreamscapes. The collection brings together papers demonstrating differing perspectives, especially in how comics artists employ different genres, tropes, and symbolism, particularly relating to the Gothic. The articles in this collection draw attention to the flexibility of the comics medium, demonstrating its suitability to convey affect and to frame deeply personal stories within a wider social context. It also reflects upon the growing scholarly field of Graphic Medicine and suggests a need to diversify the works and creators studied, as well as broader analyses of the comics creation, engagement, and community.
Publisher
Open Library of the Humanities
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Visual Arts and Performing Arts
Reference26 articles.
1. Expressions of Doomscrolling in Pandemic Comics: How Portrayals of Mobile Technology Shifted to a New Normal After COVID-19;Garcia, S.;The Comics Grid: Journal of Comics Scholarship,2023
2. ‘“Keep it Gothic, Man”: Gothic and Graphic Medicine in Ian Williams’ The Bad Doctor’;Green, M.;Gothic Studies,2023
3. “Spreading fun: Comic zombies, Joker viruses and COVID-19 jokes”;Jürgens, A.Fiadotava, A.Tscharke, D.Viaña, J.N.;Journal of Science & Popular Culture,2021
4. “The role of comics in public health communication during the COVID-19 pandemic”;Kearns, C.Kearns, N.;Journal of Visual Communication in Medicine,2020