2014
DOI: 10.1386/stic.5.2.293_1
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Pain proxies, migraine and invisible disability in Renée French’s H Day

Abstract: Renée French contributes to the growing subgenre of comics about medical issues and disability in her wordless text, H Day. Working with an invisible impairment, migraine, as her subject, French creates separate points of view, connecting them with overlapping imagery and externalizing focalization. Using a traditional iconography of dogs as pain proxies, the work also contributes significantly to larger discussions about agency in the identity politics of invisible disability.

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“…Davis, 2005). The minimisation of invisible illnesses/disabilities is prevalent (M. Williams, 2003), due to both the idea that the only disability worth taking seriously is visible (Stone, 2005) and the connection between visibility and empathy (Honeyman, 2014). This can lead to accommodations not being sought.…”
Section: Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Davis, 2005). The minimisation of invisible illnesses/disabilities is prevalent (M. Williams, 2003), due to both the idea that the only disability worth taking seriously is visible (Stone, 2005) and the connection between visibility and empathy (Honeyman, 2014). This can lead to accommodations not being sought.…”
Section: Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dominant cultures' insistence on visible signs to legitimate impairments (Samuels, 2013) makes for an ongoing burden of proof (A. Davis, 2005;Honeyman, 2014). A stranger's cross-examination of my disability leaves me feeling distressed.…”
Section: Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation