Wearing their heart on a wall: the World’s Biggest Comic

Author:

Martinez Lee1,Granek-Dennis Kasia2,Parker Richard3,Taylor Judy4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mental Health Academic, University of South Australia , Whyalla 5608 , Australia

2. MSW student Flinders University , Bedford Park 5042 , Australia

3. Whyalla Suicide Prevention Network , Whyalla 5608 , Australia

4. College of Medicine and Dentistry; James Cook University , Bebegu Yumba Campus Douglas 4811 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract An arts-based project, using a community development approach engaging people in a community of place to address suicide prevention, is potentially powerful. This involves linking community development and mental health promotion practice. The challenge in doing this is that, conceptually, the integration between the two is incomplete and there is a lack of guidance about effective community processes. This paper analyses community development processes to create the World’s Biggest Comic (WBC). The WBC was an innovative, large scale public art project engaging local artists, some with a lived experience of mental illness, to tell a story of Will and Hope. A 15-part comic story, printed on vinyl canvas panels and mounted on buildings, covered 600 m2. https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=217471332673743 Conducted in a small rural South Australian community by the local volunteer Suicide Prevention Network, the WBC aimed to raise awareness, break down stigma, and prompt life-saving conversations. Results of a mixed method impact evaluation are presented using a community development framework that considers ‘people’, ‘space’, and ‘place’. The use of sociological concepts about community and the community field, the value of relationships, and listening to the voices of those with a lived experience of mental illness, may assist practice. Some potential learnings and pitfalls in using a community development approach in mental health promotion are discussed.

Funder

National Suicide Prevention Trial

South Australian Office of the Chief Psychiatrist

SA Suicide Prevention Community Grants Scheme

Whyalla City Council

Whyalla Suicide Prevention Network

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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