Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to the American Graphic Novel
- The Cambridge Companion to the American Graphic Novel
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Editors’ Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I History and Genre
- Part II Graphic Novels and the Quest for an American Diversity
- 10 Expressions of Jewishness alongside Grief in American Graphic Novels
- 11 Black Looking and Looking Black
- 12 African American New History-Writing in Graphic Narratives
- 13 Coming to America, “Land of the Free”
- 14 Spatiotemporal Projections
- 15 Queer Graphic Novels
- 16 American Women’s Lives in Graphic Novels
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To …
- References
10 - Expressions of Jewishness alongside Grief in American Graphic Novels
from Part II - Graphic Novels and the Quest for an American Diversity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2024
- The Cambridge Companion to the American Graphic Novel
- The Cambridge Companion to the American Graphic Novel
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Editors’ Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I History and Genre
- Part II Graphic Novels and the Quest for an American Diversity
- 10 Expressions of Jewishness alongside Grief in American Graphic Novels
- 11 Black Looking and Looking Black
- 12 African American New History-Writing in Graphic Narratives
- 13 Coming to America, “Land of the Free”
- 14 Spatiotemporal Projections
- 15 Queer Graphic Novels
- 16 American Women’s Lives in Graphic Novels
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To …
- References
Summary
A large number of artists with Jewish American backgrounds have been deeply influential to the development of comics (notably of the superhero variety), social and political cartoons, and graphic novels. This chapter examines the recurrence of trauma and grief in the works of several Jewish authors, both as core motifs and as narrative/visual devices. It follows the career of graphic pioneer Will Eisner, who moved from realistically drawn crime and adventure fiction (with The Spirit, an early example of long-form comic appealing to adult readers) to more personal themes such as family history and loss in A Contract with God, the first US publication self-labeled as a “graphic novel.” Art Spiegelman’s work (Maus, 1986 and 1991; In the Shadow of No Towers, 2004) confronts similar themes grounded in trauma, suffering, and transgenerational testimony, where the artist’s memorialization of the past and experience with the present construct a graphic negotiation with grief. The chapter finds echoes of this approach in more recent works from Jewish graphic novelists such as Roz Chast and Ken Krimstein.
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- The Cambridge Companion to the American Graphic Novel , pp. 177 - 192Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023