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Konrad, Tatiana. "The Legacy of American Slavery: Contesting Blackness and Re-envisioning Nationhood in Kindred: A Graphic Novel Adaptation." Journal of Perpetrator Research 4.2 2022. Accessed 24 Oct. 2022. <https://jpr.winchesteru ... t/10.21039/jpr.4.2.110/>. 
Added by: joachim (24/10/2022, 20:15)   
Resource type: Web Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.21039/jpr.4.2.110
BibTeX citation key: Konrad2022
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Kindred", Adaptation, Butler. Octavia E., Duffy. Damian, Ethnicity, Jennings. John
Creators: Konrad
Collection: Journal of Perpetrator Research
Views: 9/955
Attachments   URLs   https://jpr.winche ... 21039/jpr.4.2.110/
Abstract
This article analyses Damian Duffy and John Jennings’ adaptation of Octavia E. Butler’s novel Kindred (1979), Kindred: A Graphic Novel Adaptation (2017). It focuses on the graphic novel’s explorations of the American past and present to examine the legacy of slavery today. Touching upon issues of interracial relationships, biracial children, and sexual abuse, the graphic novel discusses the complexity of being Black in the U.S., from the times of slavery to the present day, and demonstrates how generations of Americans are bonded together through the tragic history of slavery – a history through which racism has challenged the American nation and continues to do so. The article specifically focuses on how the graphic novel explores the relationship between the perpetrators and victims of slavery, the immediate and long-lasting effects thereof, as well as the responsibility borne by both the perpetrator and the passive observer (or the ‘implicated subject’, to borrow Michael Rothberg’s term) in the formation of institutionalised oppression. The graphic novel functions on various layers: making perpetrators and victims visible (in the antebellum temporal context), complicating and deconstructing the perpetrator-victim binary in the contemporary context, and exploring implication through time. This article examines the potential of the graphic novel as a genre (in particular, its visual and verbal aspects) and of the motif of time travel to address the difficult legacy of slavery, the question of implication across time, and systemic/institutional racism.
  
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