Comics as a Research Practice: Drawing Narrative Geographies Beyond the Frame

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This book proposes a novel creative research practice in geography based on comics. It presents a transdisciplinary approach that uses a set of qualitative visual methods and extends from within the geohumanities across literary spatial studies, comics, urban studies, mobility studies, and beyond.

Written by a geographer-cartoonist, the book focuses on ‘narrative geographies’ and embraces a geocritical and relational approach to examine comic book geographies in pursuit of a growing interest in creative, art-based experimental methods in the geohumanities. It explores comics-based research through interconnections between art and geography and through theoretical and methodological contributions from scholars working in the fields of the social sciences, humanities, literary geographies, mobilities, comics, literary studies, and urban studies, as well as from visual artists, comics authors, and art practitioners. Comics are valuable objects of geographical interest because of their spatial grammar. They are also a language particularly suited to geographical analysis, and the ‘geoGraphic novel’ offers a practice of research that has the power to assemble and disassemble new spatial meanings. The book thus explores how the ‘geoGraphic novel’ as a verbo-visual genre allows the study of geographical issues, composes geocentred stories, engages wider and non-specialist audiences, promotes geo-artistic collaboration, and works as a narrative intervention in urban contexts.

Through a practice-based approach and the internal perspective of a geographer-cartoonist, the book provides examples of how geoGraphic fieldwork is conducted and offers analysis of the processes of ideation, composition, and dissemination of geoGraphic narratives.

Author(s): Giada Peterle
Series: Routledge Research in Culture, Space and Identity
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 190
Tags: Literary Criticism, Comics, Research Methodology

Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
List of figures
Acknowledgements
Preface: constellations of urban comics
1 Introduction: enacting comic book geographies
Comic book geographies in practice
A geocritical reading of comic book geographies
Comic book geographies in practice: sketching the geoGraphic novel
Part I Assembling comics for creative interventions in urban space
2 Comics as assemblages: building urban stories in the public sphere
For a ‘street geography’: drawing in public space
Comics as geo-artistic collaborations
Let it speak! The voice of a building
Reading paths through public space
3 Drawing urban comics: ethnoGraphic strolling across ‘peripheral’ neighbourhoods
Comics behind the scenes: authoring a geoGraphic narrative
Travel at the centre of a comic book anthology
Walk and draw, map and tell! CartoGraphic strolling in Arcella (Padua)
Bridging pages and places: visual metaphors and geoGraphic chronotopes
Comic book geographies beyond the frame
Part II Moving comics from representation to practice
4 Graphic mobilities: mobile practices, bodies, and landscapes of movement in comics
The representation of movement in comics
Mobility and the geohumanities
5 Doing comics on the move: an autoethnographic account of geoGraphic fieldwork
Mobile storylines along the tramway in Turku
Storying memories, interviews, and encounters along the route
Composing urban archives: objects and visuals as narrative triggers
GeoGraphic fieldwork in practice: mobile methods, creative practices, and the researcher–cartoonist beyond the frame
Index