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Darda, Joseph. "Graphic Ethics: Theorizing the Face in Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis." College Literature 40. (2013): 31–51. 
Added by: joachim (4/30/13, 12:13 AM)   
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.1353/lit.2013.0022
BibTeX citation key: Darda2013
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Persepolis", Autobiography, Butler. Judith, Ethics, France, Iran, Satrapi. Marjane
Creators: Darda
Collection: College Literature
Views: 7/1162
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Abstract
Critics indicate that the graphic memoir is uniquely capable of making an ethical appeal to the reader. But it remains unclear what this mechanism is or how it functions in the text. It is crucial that we recognize what representational practices do and do not communicate what Avery Gordon calls complex personhood. “Complex personhood,” she notes, “means that all people … remember and forget, are beset by contradictions, and recognize and misrecognize themselves and others” (1997, 4). The graphic memoir, I aim to make clear, lends itself to the transmission of this complexity. In considering the ethics of the graphic memoir, I first trace the origin of the debate within comics criticism. Second, calling on Judith Butler’s theorization of the Levinasian notion of ‘the face,’ I establish an ethical framework to substantiate the thus-far-unclear claims connecting formal destabilization to reader obligation. Third, I demonstrate this ethical import as it operates within Marjane Satrapi’s émigré graphic memoir Persepolis.
Added by: joachim  Last edited by: joachim
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