Affiliation:
1. ISNI: 0000000094943202 University of Washington Tacoma
Abstract
In her graphic memoir, A Game for Swallows: To Die, to Leave, to Return, Zeina Abirached depicts the city of Beirut during its protracted civil war, relying on her own recollections and those of family and neighbours to reconstruct an urban environment that was radically altered by conflict. This article examines the book’s depiction of Beirut as an embodied space of experience, a city that is full of life not only because of how its inhabitants adjust to the spatial disruptions of the war, but also because it lives in memory. Through both images and text, Abirached’s memoir suggests that while the body of the city reflects the trauma felt by its inhabitants during conflict, it also fosters a sense of identity, illustrating that figuratively reconstructed places can serve to memorialize both individual and collective responses to trauma and its aftermath.
Subject
Urban Studies,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Cultural Studies
Reference22 articles.
1. Abirached, Z. (2013), ‘“I was convinced that Beirut stopped at that wall”: Interview by Alex Dueben’, Comics Journal, 25 November, http://www.tcj.com/i-was-convinced-that-beirut-stopped-at-that-wall-an-interview-with-zeina-abirached. Accessed 24 January 2022.
2. Artist’s statement;European Comic Art,2015
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2 articles.
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