![]() |
BOBC |
Dozier, Ayanna. "Wayward Travels: Racial Uplift, Black Women, and the Pursuit of Love and Travel in Torchy in Heartbeats by Jackie Ormes." Feminist Media Histories 4.(2018): 12–29. Added by: joachim (7/7/18, 11:56 PM) Last edited by: joachim (7/8/18, 12:02 AM) |
Resource type: Journal Article Language: en: English Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1525/fmh.2018.4.3.12 BibTeX citation key: Dozier2018 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "Torchy in Heartbeats", Comic strip, Ethnicity, Gender, Ormes. Jackie, USA Creators: Dozier Collection: Feminist Media Histories |
Views: 1/338
|
Attachments | URLs http://fmh.ucpress.edu/content/4/3/12 |
Abstract |
Golden Age cartoonist Jackie Ormes created dramatic narratives in her comic strip Torchy in Heartbeats (Pittsburgh Courier, 1950–54) that were unique, in that they were created by a Black woman cartoonist for Black women readers. Ormes skillfully manipulated the typical strip’s narrative structure to creatively depict a single Black woman freely traveling the world in the era of Jim Crow. This essay examines two specific Torchy in Heartbeats strips from 1951–52 to reveal how Ormes worked within the then-dominant framework of respectability politics—not to challenge it, but to present a Black woman navigating racialized gender discrimination and pursuing her desires despite her “respectable status,” with sometimes terrifying results. In the process, it works to redress the paucity of scholarship on Black women’s contributions to comic books and strips.
|