Introduction

Author(s):  
Hertha D. Sweet Wong

Arising from a period of intense social upheaval and technological innovation, late 20th-century writers and artists challenge inherited notions of subjectivity and experiment with new hybrid forms of autobiographies composed of both image and text. The introduction provides an overview of how disciplinary boundaries have become more porous, leading to a variety of transdisciplinary visual-verbal self-narrations. The chapter reviews key concerns from Autobiography Studies and Visual Studies and how they redefine image-text relations as a matrix or a network with many surfaces and axes of interaction. The introduction also explains the organization of the book: the work of eight writers-artists–Peter Najarian, Leslie Marmon Silko, Art Spiegelman, Julie Chen, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Carrie Mae Weems, Faith Ringgold, and Edgar Heap of Birds, moving from the most literature-based to the most art-based. In dialogue with historical trauma and its consequences, each author asks crucial questions about American identity.

Author(s):  
Hertha D. Sweet Wong

In this book, Hertha D. Sweet Wong examines the intersection of writing and visual art in the autobiographical work of twentieth- and twenty-first-century American writers and artists who employ a mix of written and visual forms of self-narration. Combining approaches from autobiography studies and visual studies, Wong argues that, in grappling with the breakdown of stable definitions of identity and unmediated representation, these writers-artists experiment with hybrid autobiography in image and text to break free of inherited visual-verbal regimes and revise painful histories. These works provide an interart focus for examining the possibilities of self-representation and self-narration, the boundaries of life writing, and the relationship between image and text. Wong considers eight writers-artists, including comic-book author Art Spiegelman; Faith Ringgold, known for her story quilts; and celebrated Indigenous writer Leslie Marmon Silko. Wong shows how her subjects formulate webs of intersubjectivity shaped by historical trauma, geography, race, and gender as they envision new possibilities of selfhood and fresh modes of self-narration in word and image.


1970 ◽  
Vol 41 (115) ◽  
pp. 89-100
Author(s):  
Johanne Helbo Bøndergaard

AUTHENTICITY AND FICTIONALITY | Traditionally literature on historical traumas such as genocide, war and dictatorship has shown careful respect for the extraordinary and tragic nature of the events in question by representing them in soberly realistic, silent or hermetic forms and in authentic testimonies expressing a general sensitivity to the ethical implications of colourful and enjoyable aesthetics. Recently, though, art and literature on memory and history seems to leave behind testimony and the careful performance of silence exploring instead hybrid forms,interaction with visual media, vibrant language and perspectives other than those of the witness and the victim. Junot Díaz’ novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (2007) is one example.The hypothesis explored in this article is that Díaz’ loud and colourful book uses fictionality to counter the silence and oppression of death and dictatorship that is also carefully explored.I argue that the excessive use of “genre” references and magical events explores the limits of authentic representation of historical trauma suggesting instead a reading strategy in which historycan be approached emotionally and critically through the explicit use of fictionality.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Goodkind ◽  
Beverly Gorman ◽  
Julia Hess ◽  
Marianna LaNoue ◽  
Lance Freeland ◽  
...  

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