2014
DOI: 10.1080/08989575.2014.921989
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Looking on the Dark and Bright Side: Creative Metaphors of Depression in Two Graphic Memoirs

Abstract: When people speak or write about their experience of depression, a small number of metaphors often dominate their accounts. This article uses two graphic memoirs to show how comics artists may creatively transform such entrenched metaphors by drawing on the sociocultural conventions and formal properties of the medium.

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Cited by 39 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The use of images and visual metaphors in health comics, in particular, their social and emotional impacts, is a topic in need of greater exploration. Metaphors allow us ‘to understand abstract areas of our lives in terms of more concrete and embodied experiences’ . Many of the metaphors in the comics used in this study represented conventional cultural metaphors in a graphic form, for example illness as a fight or as a burden, which interviewees could recognise and empathise with.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of images and visual metaphors in health comics, in particular, their social and emotional impacts, is a topic in need of greater exploration. Metaphors allow us ‘to understand abstract areas of our lives in terms of more concrete and embodied experiences’ . Many of the metaphors in the comics used in this study represented conventional cultural metaphors in a graphic form, for example illness as a fight or as a burden, which interviewees could recognise and empathise with.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The variety of studies shows that metaphor research as a way to model change in communication is widespread in our discipline. While some researchers study metaphor at a microlevel, for example, by studying personal memoirs (e.g., El Refaie, ; Fixsen, 2016), others study how important societal topics like the financial crisis or the EU are metaphorically described, explained, and legitimized (e.g., Musolff, ; Nerghes et al, ). As different as these approaches are, most of them start from one of the basic premises of CMT (Lakoff & Johnson, ): that metaphors are an integral aspect of thought.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In analyses of natural language data, communication scholars have used data from different types of sources. To give some examples: Scholars interested in microlevel processes have used unpublished personal memoirs (Fixsen, 2016), published autobiographical memoirs (El Refaie, 2014), or online data (e.g., web forums; Bates, 2015;Hellsten, 2003) as case studies to be analyzed. Scholars interested in mesolevel processes have used organizational documents (Cheng & Ho, in press;Tourish & Hargie, 2012).…”
Section: Change In Communicationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Then the women were introduced to the concept of visual metaphor and invited to draw their experience of infertility and its effect on their relationships by representing it visually first as a creature or animal, then as a place or situation, and finally as a weather condition. These source domains were chosen on the basis of their prevalence both in Knight’s work and in other comics by both Western and non-Western creators dealing with physical or mental ill-health (see, e.g., El Refaie, 2014, 2015). The workshop ended with a free drawing session, which allowed the participants to produce a large-scale drawing of any aspect of their infertility experience in any form they chose.…”
Section: Case Study: Data and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%