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Berman, Margaret Fink: "Imagining an Idiosyncratic Belonging. Representing Disability in Chris Ware’s “Building Stories”." In: David M. Ball und Martha B. Kuhlman (Hrsg.): The Comics of Chris Ware. Drawing is a Way of Thinking. Jackson: Univ. Press of Mississippi, 2010, S. 191–205. Added by: joachim (23 Jul 2010 08:10:45 UTC) Last edited by: joachim (29 Jul 2014 14:24:02 UTC) |
Resource type: Book Article Languages: englisch DOI: 10.14325/mississippi/9781604734423.003.0014 BibTeX citation key: Berman2010 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details ![]() |
Categories: General Keywords: "Building Stories", Ästhetik, Behinderung, USA, Ware. Chris Creators: Ball, Berman, Kuhlman Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi (Jackson) Collection: The Comics of Chris Ware. Drawing is a Way of Thinking |
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Abstract |
In Chris Ware’s comic strip “Building Stories,” the protagonist is a 30-year-old woman who is an amputee and sometimes wears a prosthetic limb. Ware’s description strangely elides disability as a characterization of the woman, relegating it to a de-privileged position in his account of the narrative. This chapter examines the ways in which Ware represents the woman in “Building Stories,” with the goal of demystifying her physical difference by situating her within an aesthetic of the ordinary. After discussing the politics underlying images of bodies and disability as a politicized identity, it considers Ware’s aesthetic of ordinariness and narrative structure. The chapter then argues that Ware imagines the disabled experience to be not radically different from the daily rituals of the other inhabitants of the building, thus opening a space for the protagonist that the chapter refers to as “idiosyncratic belonging.”
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