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Romero-Jódar, Andrés. "A hammer to shape reality: Alan Moore’s graphic novels and the avant-gardes." Studies in Comics 2. (2011): 39–56. Added by: joachim (11/15/12, 11:00 PM) |
Resource type: Journal Article Language: en: English Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1386/stic.2.1.39_1 BibTeX citation key: RomeroJodar2011 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "From Hell", "Lost Girls", "V for Vendetta", "Watchmen", Avantgarde, Campbell. Eddie, Gebbie. Melinda, Gibbons. Dave, Lloyd. David, Moore. Alan, United Kingdom Creators: Romero-Jódar Collection: Studies in Comics |
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Abstract |
Alan Moore’s graphic novels have marked essential standpoints in the history of narrative iconical genres. Works like Watchmen or V for Vendetta helped reorient the 1980s Anglo-American comic book into the graphic novels of the 1990s by pushing the boundaries of the comic-book genre into the realm of postmodernity. Moore’s graphic novels depict characters that are suffocated by the grand narratives of capitalist societies, Orwellian dystopias and totalizing ideologies. In this vein, his works may be placed in the context of postmodernist thinking postulated by Jean-François Lyotard, Jean Baudrillard or Fredric Jameson. However, the rebellious attitude shown in his narratives against those globalizing definitions of the self and homogenizing social orders strongly recalls the efforts of the early twentieth-century avant-gardes to provoke their bourgeois audiences into action by fostering their radical distaste. The aim of this article is to consider certain examples of Alan Moore’s graphic novels as direct inheritors of the committed ideology and technical experimentalism proposed by avant-garde movements at the beginning of the twentieth century. As Brecht famously argued, ‘art is not a mirror to reflect the world, but a hammer with which to shape it’. This article will thus centre on Moore’s works that best reflect the same experimental spirit of revolutionary art forms fostered by Cubism, Modernism, Futurism and other European avant-garde movements. These movements, by using the power of artistic creation, called audiences to social action against the rising fascist discourses of the first decades of the twentieth century. It is my contention that graphic novels like Lost Girls, Watchmen, From Hell and V for Vendetta connect with the recovery of avant-garde ethics and aesthetics, and seem to renew their attacks against the moral double standard of bourgeois, accommodated social classes. Then, Moore’s graphic novels raise public awareness and serve as social denunciation, becoming, at certain moments, examples of intellectual terrorism against the status quo.
Added by: joachim Last edited by: joachim |