BOBC

WIKINDX Resources  

Precup, Mihaela. "‘That Medieval Eastern-European Shtetl Family of Yours’: Negotiating Jewishness in Aline Kominsky Crumb’s Need More Love (2007)." Studies in Comics 6. (2015): 313–27. 
Added by: joachim (11/26/16, 4:20 PM)   Last edited by: joachim (11/26/16, 4:25 PM)
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.1386/stic.6.2.313_1
BibTeX citation key: Precup2015
Email resource to friend
View all bibliographic details
Categories: General
Keywords: "Need More Love", Autobiography, Intermediality, Judaism, Kominsky-Crumb. Aline, Photography, Stereotypes, USA
Creators: Precup
Collection: Studies in Comics
Views: 17/2493
Attachments  
Abstract
This article focuses on several representations of Jewishness from American underground cartoonist Aline Kominsky Crumb’s memoir Need More Love (2007) and several more recent publications. In her work, Kominsky Crumb makes repeated references to almost every stereotypical aspect of the Jewish American middle-class community in which she was raised, from the accent to the clothes, social mannerisms, and even preferred type of plastic surgery. In conversation with Federica Clementi, Riv Ellen-Prell, and others, I read the comics collected in Need More Love in conjunction with several of the author’s photographs in order to revisit the debate on the dynamic between comics and photography as modes of self-representation. I argue that, by narrowing down the potential of comics to what the medium can do as caricature, Kominsky Crumb connects to a long tradition of social satire and self-disparaging humour. However, by including photographs of herself in her work, she not only pays tribute to the more traditional norms of life-writing, but also invites an interpretation of her cartoon self as a masquerade of Jewish femininity staged upon a body whose vulnerability complicates the binary logic of the stereotype.
  
WIKINDX 6.10.2 | Total resources: 14672 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: Modern Language Association (MLA)