Published:
August 2022

Issue:
Vol.17, No.1

Word count:
3972

About the author

  • MA ATh, BNurs, AThR

    Amy Bell has been a registered nurse, frontline activist, in community women’s circus, an event coordinator for Winter Magic Festival, committee member at the Blue Mountains Music Festival, performed in an all women punk band 2013–2020, and built an artist profile with her cartoon Daisychain, leading to published work, exhibitions, and murals. She completed her Masters of Art Therapy in 2018 (with Distinction), and is currently back at Western Sydney University pursuing a Masters of Research, exploring comics. Amy has lived, volunteered and worked in the Upper Mountains community (Dharug and Gundungurra) since 1997.

This work is published in JoCAT and is licensed under a CC BY-NC-ND-4.0 license.

Storytelling + the art of comics in visual and written expression: Recovery with narrative art

Amy Bell

Abstract 

As a cartoonist I use a semi-autobiographical character, Daisy, as a device to process my own experiences with therapeutic outcomes and I became curious about other cartoonists’ relationships with their characters as a healing and self-regulation process.

I approached the ethnographic study with the view that creating autobiographical cartoons and comics could have application within formal art therapy settings. Drawing on narrative theory, and comics theory from an art therapy perspective, I immersed myself in the world of confessional comics with alter ego characters exploring a cross-section of themes. I discovered hundreds of webcomics and their followers. Many prolific and widely recognised cartoonists use the device of alter-ego cartoons and confessional comics to express lived experience and connect with others experiencing similar suffering. Many of these artists use an alter-ego to express their ideas and feelings. I am on a quest to find out why artists create alter egos and share them with audiences, and how this could be incorporated by art therapists in practice.

Keywords

Cartoon, storytelling, comics, self-regulation, witnessing, narrative

Introduction

As a cartoonist I use a semi-autobiographical character, Daisy, as a device to process my own experiences with therapeutic outcomes and I became curious about other cartoonists’ relationships with their characters as a healing and self-regulation process.

I approached the study with the view that creating autobiographical cartoons and comics could have application within formal art therapy settings. Drawing on narrative theory, and comics theory from an art therapy perspective, I immersed myself in the world of confessional comics, or graphic autobiographical narratives, with a cross-section of themes. I discovered hundreds of web comics and their followers. Many prolific and widely recognised cartoonists use the device of alter-ego cartoons and confessional comics to express lived experience and connect with others experiencing similar suffering. Many of these artists use an alter-ego to express their ideas and feelings.

The literature indicates that cartooning is flexible, accessible and healing, allowing the creator to transcend time and identity barriers. I selected twelve popular comics artists and cartoonists who use alter-egos in their work and undertook an unobtrusive, preliminary study of their informal use of art as self-therapy. I investigated their relationship with their characters, or alter-egos, their audiences, and their experience with cartooning as a healing tool. This relationship creates a triad of artist–comics–audience that is was significant in the recovery or healing process of the comic artist and reflects the Schaverien triangle of art therapy.

This essay includes an accompanying zine (Figures 1–4) used to creatively display the data collected from the comics.

It is apparent that a broader study interviewing artists would deepen knowledge about the value of the personal experience for each artist, further informing a program or approach to be potentially developed for use by art therapists.

Why is the project so important?

In early 2013, I experienced a sudden end to my marriage, leaving me with three young daughters and a life to rebuild. In 2014, unable to find a counsellor that helped, I enrolled in an online cartooning course, thinking that doing something creative might help me recover. Daisy, my character, was born during the cartooning course and has remained an essential friend since. Daisy has also become integrated with my identity.

Daisy emerged in 2014 as a single-frame cartoon on daily reflections inspired by conversations or observations, evolving to become more personal and honest statements about heartbreak and grief. I shared these on social media and gained a small but engaged following of over 1000, noticing the audience was invested and often wanted to drive the story. As my youngest daughter turned six, I was needing to find work or study to satisfy Centrelink. As I was no longer registered to work as a nurse, and realising the cartoons were helping me reframe resentment and grief, I formalised this understanding by enrolling in the Master of Art Therapy at Western Sydney University. The process of studying took Daisy to new levels, but after graduating I felt exposed and I deleted my social media accounts in late 2019. This action was like a reset, and a purging, as I felt my heartbreak had resolved. I have since created a new Instagram for Daisy (@Daisy_Mayday_Artist), which has become less prolific, but still a process I am compelled to create and share. I can confidently say Daisy saved my life and continues to accompany my journey as I venture into the world of research, focusing on comic theory in an art therapy context.

I became curious about the use of alter egos and autobiographical cartooning as an intuitive form of narrative self-therapy employed by artists to express specific and general ailments related to social, political and  personal issues; mental health; physical illness; and trauma. I was interested in exploring whether comics theory could be adapted by art therapists to guide people through recovery.

To see if my experience with cartooning might resonate with that of other artists, and open the possibility to develop autobiographical cartooning, or alter-ego creation as an art therapy approach, I wanted to find out if other cartoonists report similar experiences with their characters. I was particularly interested to see whether cartooning, and the alter-egos the artists created, became an important device for expressing and navigating events in, or responses to, their lives.

This project is a preliminary study exploring similarities or differences in autobiographical cartoonist experiences. Due to the scope of the ethnographic exploration being unobtrusive, the data is limited to cartoonists who have addressed their relationship with their characters in an interview or artist statement. I use their own words and images to explore the experiences of published cartoonists with the view to informing the development of an art therapy program or approach in the future. A wider study would produce broad thematic evidence and bring a deeper understanding of how to develop an art therapy program; however, the scope of this preliminary project is to explore the artist’s experience of autobiographical cartooning and consider it as an accessible and valuable narrative art therapy approach.

Literature review

‘Confessional comics’ are a growing art form, increasing exponentially with the internet, and Art Spiegelman (2013), the creator of Maus, credits Justin Green’s 1972 comic Binky Brown meets the Holy Virgin Mary for inventing the term. My searches on the internet revealed hundreds of confessional cartoons, comics, and graphic novels that reach a wide audience on the web, in a manner that was impossible in the 1970–2000 era of underground printing, zines and small publishing. The audience plays an integral role in the process. As McCloud (1993; 2006) explains, cartooning is a subtle art of using symbolic representation to evoke an emotional response or relationship with the audience, and is a language understood by readers. Warhol’s essay ‘The space between’ (2011) expands on McCloud’s theory to demonstrate how comics are a powerful tool for expressing complex emotion by describing the invisible language between the panels. Warhol (2011) argues that Alison Bechdel’s graphic autobiography Fun home (2006) challenges the dualistic (image/words) narrative of autobiographical comics previously accepted by theorists, such as Hatfield (2005). Warhol extends comics theory to include more layers, including ‘feeling’ in spaces between the images and words. This is echoed by Giarelli and Tulman (2003), who assert cartoons contain truths, or secrets, in the semiotics that can be unravelled and used as data; further, the polysemous or multiple layers used in creating comics make them a rich complex language.

Learmonth and Huckvale (2008) discuss the Schaverien triangle in art therapy as the differentiating factor between art psychotherapy and talking-based therapies. Comics reflect this triangle naturally due to the relationship with an audience. The audience plays a role as witness. Ben Snakepit (2007) demonstrates how the audience receives the artist’s work, relates to it, and feeds back that the artist is not alone and that his pain provides some comfort for others. This is demonstrated via sales and online comments, ‘shares’, and ‘likes’. For decades Judy Horacek (2013) has used cartooning to communicate feminist issues with humour, and her audience purchases these messages as magnets, tea towels, and cards. Similarly, Celia Allison has created a business from her character Cecily, because the audience empathises with the character. Michael Leunig, Charles Shultz (Peanuts) and, recently, Christopher Grady (Lunarbaboon) have also generated income from their characters because their audiences relate. Likewise, Art Spiegelman’s Maus has been a bestseller since its release 30 years ago, while Binky Brown has also remained in print. This shows that comics are timeless, meaningful to the reader and the author, with a relationship forming between the audience, artist, and comic. This role of witnessing is one the art therapist could play, sitting within the Schaverien triangle of art therapy.

Seiden (2006) is an art therapist who uses an autobiographical comic to display art as a personal healing form and has written about the narrative being important for processing trauma. He says that comics provide an opportunity to create and explore with control (Seiden, 2006; Mullholland, 2004). Art therapist Lucas-Falk (2010) says comics are “accessible to the average person and not as intimidating as fine arts mediums might be” (p.233). Because comics provide storytelling potential beyond verbal narrative and visual image-making alone (Sabin, 1993; Lucas-Falk, 2010; Mullholland, 2004), they provide unique scope for use in art therapy. Lucas-Falk states that “the use of comics as a self-healing agent has arisen naturally within contemporary society, and offer[s] compelling argument for its inclusion as a medium in art therapy” (p.233). Sabin and Triggs (2002) identify the same themes in confessional comics, saying they are also the themes that frequently occur in therapy, including single motherhood, mental and physical health, trauma, abuse, midlife crisis and social issues. This raises the question as to how artists are intuitively using comics as therapy.

Howie et al. (2013) and Gantt and Tinnin (2007) focus on the verbal and non-verbal “brains” and how art therapy can help trauma sufferers using an intensive “graphic narrative trauma processing” (Gantt & Tinnin, p.39). Gantt and Tinnin report flaws in their study, but the findings indicate it would be worthwhile revisiting it using better parameters, as it strongly suggests that comic-based narrative therapy has beneficial outcomes with trauma. Andrew Hore is a Canberra-based cartoonist who runs a successful program he calls Quick Draw. On his website he describes Quick Draw as using “art therapy-based workshop programs”. Hore draws (cartoons) people’s ‘strengths’. He is not formally trained in counselling or art therapy, but rather uses his sporting and youth-work background to promote wellness with his cartooning.

Carp (1998) refers to Jungian archetypes to demonstrate that the creation of a clown character in drama therapy gives the participant the opportunity to become aware of their ability to heal themselves by connecting with, and listening to, their own inner clown as a healer. The paper argues that an individual’s creation of a character removes the Ego and allows Self to emerge (p.249), meaning that the barriers created by society or our own experience have caused a formal presentation (Ego) that blocks our Self or free expression. The therapist acts as ‘witness’ to the clown and can contain the client’s experience. This article shows the benefit of a therapeutically supported creation of character, due to the potential power or intensity of the experience for the client. It also shows the importance of being witnessed as part of recovery. Aspects of both drama therapy and comics rely on creating or discovering an inner voice (character). Mullholland (2004) discusses his personal benefit of using comic-making therapeutically: “As a medium, comic books provide their creators a wide variety of resources to aid their mental health. They allow for expression of the self in terms of body image, verbal expression, physical action, and emotion” (p.43). He concludes that comics are therapeutic because they are a safe way for people to express situations while maintaining control of the outcomes and being removed from the consequences.

Wiid et al. (2012) observe, “While pictures tell stories, in the case of cartoons, stories also tell pictures” (p.543). They discuss the political cartoon theory, observing how cartoons reflect societal sentiment as it shifts over time. Graphic devices in cartooning are used to persuade the reader, by using visual techniques to influence the emotion and judgement of the reader (Wiid et al., 2012; McCloud, 1993). Cartooning invites people to “create their own rules; this in turn, made work unique, visceral, and compelling” (Brunetti, 2011, p.3). Brunetti teaches cartooning and has observed that the best work comes from students that expose themselves, while a guarded student, or “the narcissist” (p.6) student, who is not self-critical or open to criticism, rarely produces anything relatable or interesting. Brunetti emphasises in his lessons that a key ingredient of cartooning is “life” (p.16). This tells me that for a cartoon to be received by an audience, to be relatable, the author needs to be suffering and putting that suffering into the cartoon. The therapeutic benefit for the author comes from the relationship with the process of creating the autobiographical comics, and the connection with the witness/audience.

In 2007, Ian Williams started a website for collecting comics written by medical professionals, patients, and artists about physical and mental medical conditions. He called this Graphic Medicine, having completed an MA dissertation on comics as a resource for healthcare professionals, where combining comics and medicine proved to have benefits in recovery and education. Venkatesan and Peter (2018) have noted the value of graphic medicine as a therapeutic tool in trauma recovery, and show the effectiveness of art as a therapeutic device, noting that comics are particularly useful owing to their narrative and visual elements, which enable authors to tell their story in space and time. Mulholland (2004) confirms the benefits of comics, saying art therapists can support clients to create autobiographical comics to “release some of the negative aspects of their feelings in a constructive and creative manner” (p.43).

The creation process of comics follows Herman’s stages of recovery (2001); first, to create a safe place; second, to retell the story (mourning) repetitively until the feelings neutralise; and then, to reconnect (this could be to the audience, therapist as witness, or people in their lives). Herman states that sharing experiences and social action is an essential part of reconnecting and reconciling the trauma.

The literature overwhelmingly supports that autobiographical comics and cartoons are an intuitive form of self-therapy employed by artists. Comics can be a powerful medium that combines art and narrative, which could be employed in a formal art therapy situation.

How I did it, and the perspective

Drawing on comics theory (McCloud, 1993; 2006) and wearing an art therapist lens, I used narrative analysis to find patterns in the cartoonists’ alter egos and autobiographical works, such as themes of mental and physical health, social issues and abuse recovery, to explore the use of cartooning, and comic strips, by artists as an intuitive form of self-therapy. I approached the study with the view that comics theory can be adapted by art therapists to guide people through recovery.

I used the university library search and Google with the key words: “cartoonist with alter-egos”; “autobiographical comics”; and “characters and cartoonist”. The volume that I discovered on the internet required me to set up exclusion criteria for choosing cartoonists with alter ego characters, as categorising the hundreds of cartoonists thematically was beyond the scope of this project.

I narrowed the search to focus on cartoonists who have documented artist statements, interviews or biographies detailing their relationships with their autobiographical characters. I chose this because I wanted to find out about the artists’ relationships with their work within the parameters of an unobtrusive study rather than directly interviewing the artists’.

Comics theory recognises the cartoonist uses devices to express complex feelings or ideas with images, text styles, and the spaces between panels that link meaning of time, space and emotion (Warhol, 2011; McCloud, 1993; 2006). The literature review revealed it is these devices of comic theory which transcend time, location and physics that can have healing benefits to the author.

Using the exclusion criteria, I aimed to find a core sample of ten cartoonists, and look at interviews, artist statements and books about the artists and their body of work, to see if they reported similar relationships and purpose with their character(s) as I do with my character, Daisy. I wanted to find a cross-section of female and male artists, and printed and web-based publications, as well as represent a range of themes and eras in comics history. I created a set of questions to organise the data and help gather the answers needed. The flaw with this format was the reliance on existing information. Providing artists with a well-formulated questionnaire would provide more accurate answers, and I was aware of being biased. To minimise this bias, I looked for quotes in interviews or artist statements that provided evidence of the relationship between character, artist, and audience.

Very quickly, I realised my questionnaire was too time-consuming and thought to attempt to categorise the comics thematically, as it was evident that they were confessional and contained personal content. However, I saw that this, too, would require more time, and stray too far from the original purpose, and belonged in a wider study in the future.

Narrowing the data collection enabled me to examine the material within the theoretical perspective, looking for affirmation of the artists experiencing innate healing attributes from cartooning. I settled on twelve artists, including myself, about whom I could find adequate information and cover a broad sample of different artist’s approaches with cartooning. I was aware that my experience of reading the comics could influence my reading of the information, so I looked for quotes that would answer my key question about whether they experience a healing relationship from their cartooning. The artists are Celia Allison (Cecily), Sarah Andersen (Sarah’s Scribbles), Ali Dorani (Eaten Fish), Christopher Grady (Lunarbaboon), Justin Green (Binky Brown), Judy Horacek (Everywoman), Michael Leunig (Mr Curly), Mandy Ord (as herself), Charles Shultz (Peanuts), Ben Snakepit (as himself), Art Spiegelman (Maus) and myself, Amy Bell (Daisychain).

Results

See accompanying data zine: Narrative in confessional comix & cartoons (Figures 1–4).

Figure 1. Amy Bell, cover of Narratives in confessional comix & cartoons, 2018, felt-tip pen and Posca pen on A3 paper folded into A5 booklet (zine), 148 x 210 x 3mm.

An increase in accessibility, via the internet, of autobiographical comics has meant artists connect with wider audiences. Increasingly the format of confessional comics for self-improvement and self-therapy has reduced the artists’ use of self-medication and feelings of isolation.

Audiences connect with the characters, creating a triad (like the Schaverien triangle) that promotes recovery for the author and the reader.

The data zine has three sections:

The first section asks WHEN WERE YOU BORN? WHY?

 Figure 2. Amy Bell, Section 1, 2018, double page spread, felt-tip pen and Posca pen on A3 paper folded into A5 booklet (zine), 300 x 210 x 3mm.

Words used to describe the creation of the character include “arrived”, “born”, “auto-biographical”, “a better version of me”, “me” and “I drew the character as how I felt”.

The reasons given for the creation of the comics include “to cope with loss”, “exorcism”, “spiritual development”, “as psychotherapy”, “to work through personal issues”, “I got bored”, “as therapy for depression and anxiety”, “to tell my story”, “to expose women’s issues”, “to find a husband (jokes)”, “as a diary”, “it was all I wanted to do” and “to expose the devil inside humans”.

Of the twelve artists in the study, all reported the character as being born or arriving, and having an urge to continue to draw that character. All artists reported the character(s) as being semi-autobiographical or totally autobiographical. Each character is used as a device for a purpose that the artist needs to expose, exorcise, release, or share. The need to do it is like a compulsion, with the character an intrinsic part of the artist’s identity.

The second section of the zine asks HOW DOES THE AUDIENCE RELATE TO THE CHARACTER AND THEMES?

Figure 3. Amy Bell, Section 2, 2018, double page spread, felt-tip pen and Posca pen on A3 paper folded into A5 booklet (zine), 300 x 210 x 3mm.

Themes reported include “family trauma”, “OCD”, “grief”, “introversion”, “feminism”, “daily life”, “fatherhood”, “parenting”, “politics”, “losing/disappointment”, “positivity”, “mental illness”, “single life”, “punk lifestyle” and “urban life”.

The themes are all commonly seen as reasons for seeking therapy, issues both complex and simple, from serious pathology to daily life. The goals of the themes all related to the purpose of making sense or providing meaning or relief to the author.

Each artist has a large following – an audience – that claims some form of ownership of the character. Members of the audience see themselves in the character. Often artists report their audience telling them they are grateful for the character as it gives them a voice, or a way to laugh at themselves, or a community to connect with, that reduces feelings of isolation for sufferers and normalises their experiences.

The artists report feeling less isolated, and feeling relief from getting the ideas, story and feelings into the comics.

The third section of the zine asks IS IT HEALING?

Figure 4. Amy Bell, Section 3, 2018, double page spread, felt-tip pen and Posca pen on A3 paper folded into A5 booklet (zine), 300 x 210 x 3mm.

Reported healing (paraphrased and emphasis added) includes “gets feeling out”, “reaching out for help”, “catharsis”, “comfort”, “a better me”, “exorcism of neurosis”, “reduced isolation by reaching an audience”, “gave me meaning”, “process mental health”, “taught empathy” and “need to draw”.

Each artist has a following on various platforms but the newer ‘web comics’ are open for online audience feedback. Comment sections reveal that audiences feel healing from reading, relating, and connecting with the character. The effects of print-format comics that pre-date the internet can be assessed based on sales and reviews.

Figure 5. Comments thread from Lunarbaboon’s Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/Lunarbaboon/, accessed 19 October 2018.

For the artists, only one of the twelve did not have an obvious answer to the question about the healing quality of her character, and only reported a successful business from merchandise related to her character (Cecily). The remaining eleven all reported varying therapeutic qualities experienced from cartooning. They reported ceasing self-medication, gaining control, diminished feelings of isolation, catharsis, public therapy/truth telling and a need to draw.

Discussion

The results overwhelmingly indicate the artists’ experiences of healing through creating comics, as well as through the interaction with the audience, as part of reducing the isolating feelings associated with some mental health issues. Most of the artists reported a compulsion to draw the character as an expression of themselves.

A broad sample was chosen to gain a cross-section of themes and approaches to using graphics and words (comics) and the polysemous space in-between the panels to convey feeling, tell a story, or make a thoughtful insight. From single-panel cartoonists to graphic novelists, each artist manages to use the devices of cartooning to move beyond the issues they experience.

All the artists use their audience as part of the process, like a feedback loop, creating a triad between audience, comic, and artist. The artists report that audiences feel connected to the characters, evidenced by the comments and purchases (engagement), enhanced transmedia impact. It is expected that a larger sample study would reflect this sample which demonstrates that comic creation is a therapeutic device instinctively used by artists as a form of self-regulation. I have learned from this process that my personal journey with cartooning is not unique, that many people are turning to cartooning because it is a flexible and forgiving art form. The rules and conventions of cartooning are dynamic and limited only by the imagination. The medium isn’t necessarily intimidating, like some fine art materials. I have seen that the more edgy, raw and honest a cartoon is, the more connected the audience feels to the character. Comments sections on artists’ posts reveal the popularity of the art form and the number of people affected by the themes of the cartoons. Because the rules in comics can evade the laws of physics and reality, the artist can explore realms beyond the lived experience, to create a better world, one where they win, or even just to connect with an audience that feels the same.

Conclusion

Cartooning is an accessible art form with no strict rules or requirements for artistic ability; designed for storytelling and communication of ideas. It is because of this that cartooning is an ideal form of expression for a range of issues across the therapeutic spectrum, including trauma, abuse, relationships, mental and physical health, daily life struggles, and philosophy. Confessional comics combine visual and written narrative as polysemous content that expresses the feeling, and makes comics relatable, forming connection and creating community. Wolf (2021) describes it as “the first draft of history”, the whole raw story captured within the context of the moment.

This preliminary study was to assess whether a wider study would be viable to gain deeper understanding of the cartoonist and their relationship with characters, with the view to adapting an art therapy program based on cartooning. It has revealed the triad of the artist–comic–audience as being a key element in reparative connection and reflects the Schaverien triangle that is unique to art therapy (Learmonth & Huckvale, 2008).

The data and literature review of this preliminary study indicate that broader enquiry and an art therapy study with volunteer participants would be worthwhile to explore whether the experience of the cartoonist can be translated into a therapeutic setting with non-artists.

References

Bechdel, A. (2006). Fun home: A family tragicomic. Houghton Mifflin.

Brunetti, I. (2011). Cartooning: Philosophy and practice. Yale University Press.

Carp, C. (1998). Clown therapy: The creation of a clown character as a treatment intervention. The Arts in Psychotherapy, 25(4), 245–255. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0197-4556(98)00029-X

Gantt, L. & Tinnin, L. (2007). Intensive trauma therapy of PTSD and dissociation: An outcome study. The Arts in Psychotherapy, (34), 69–80. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aip.2006.09.007

Giarelli, E., & Tulman, L. (2003). Methodological issues in the use of published cartoons as data. Qualitative Health Research, 13(7), 945–956. https://doi.org/10.1177/1049732303253545

Hatfield, C. (2005). Alternative comics: An emerging literature. University Press of Mississippi.

Herman, J. (2001). Trauma and recovery: The aftermath of violence – from domestic abuse to political terror. Pandora.

Horacek, J. (2013). I am woman hear me draw. National Museum of Australia.

Hore, A. (2004–2018). Community. Funnyworks Oz. https://funnyworksoz.com/quick-draw/

Howie, P., Prasad, S., & Kristel, J. (Eds.). (2013). Using art therapy with diverse populations: Crossing cultures and abilities. Jessica Kingsley.

Kapitan, L. (2010). Introduction to art therapy research. Routledge.

Learmonth, M., & Huckvale, K. (2008). Art psychotherapy: The wood in between the worlds. New Therapist, 53 (Jan/Feb), 11–19.

Lucas-Falk, K. (2010). Comic books, connection, and the artist identity. In C. Hyland-Moon (Ed.), Materials & media in art therapy: Critical understanding of diverse artistic vocabularies (pp.231–254). Routledge.

McCloud, S. (1993). Understanding comics: The invisible art. Harper Collins.

McCloud, S. (2006). Making comics: Storytelling secrets of comics, manga and graphic novels. Harper.

Mullholland, M. (2004). Comics as art therapy. Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 21(1), 42–43. https://doi.org/10.1080/07421656.2004.10129317

Prosser, J. (1998). The status of image-based research. In J. Prosser (Ed.), Image-based research: A sourcebook for qualitative researchers. Taylor & Francis Group.

Sabin, R. (1993). Adult comics: An introduction. Routledge.

Sabin, R., & Triggs, T. (Eds). (2002). Below critical radar: Fanzines and alternative comics. Slab-O-Concrete.

Seiden, D. (2006). Artobiography. Fisheye Graphic.

Spiegelman, A. (2013). Co-mix: A retrospective of comics, graphics, and scraps. Drawn + Quarterly.

Venkatesan, S., & Peter, A.M. (2018). ‘I want to draw, I want to live’: The poetics of drawing and graphic medicine. Journal of Creative Communications, 13(2), 104–116. https://doi.org/10.1177/0973258618761406

Warburton, T. (1998). Cartoons and teachers: Mediated visual images as data. In J. Prosser (Ed.), Image-based research: A sourcebook for qualitative researchers. Taylor & Francis Group.

Warhol, R. (2011). The space between: A narrative approach to Alison Bechdel’s Fun home. College Literature, 38(3),1–20. https://doi.org/10.1353/lit.2011.0025

Watson, J. (2017). Book review: Disaster drawn: Visual witness, comics, and documentary form, by Hillary L. Chute. Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature, 42(1), art. 33. https://doi.org/10.4148/2334-4415.1964

Wiid, R., Pitt, L., & Mills, A. (2012). Every story tells a picture: Lessons from cartoons on corporate governance. Business Horizons, 55(6), 543–550. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bushor.2012.07.001

Williams, I. (2007–2018). Graphic Medicine. https://www.graphicmedicine.org/

Wolf, K. (2021). Book review: COVID chronicles, Nib’s pandemic & Comic news. Graphic Medicine. https://www.graphicmedicine.org/comic-reviews/covid-chronicles-nibs-pandemic-comic-news/

List of artists

CELIA ALLISON

Allison, C. (2012–2018). Cecily cartoon. https://cecilycartoon.wordpress.com/about/

De Lore, C. (2017, June 1). Like Cecily I was an unclaimed treasure. Noted. https://www.noted.co.nz/currently/profiles/celia-allison-like-cecily-i-was-an-unclaimed-treasure/

ALI DORANI

Gordon, M. (2017, February 17). Slow death on Manus, the sad story of Eaten Fish. The Sydney Morning Herald. https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/slow-death-on-manus-the-sad-story-of-eaten-fish-20170216-gueqa4.html

Hills, C. (2017, December 22). How Eaten Fish survived four years in refugee detention with his cartoons, social media and a network of activist friends. The World. https://www.pri.org/stories/2017-12-22/how-eaten-fish-survived-four-years-refugee-detention-his-cartoons-social-media

Marlton, A. & Doran, A. [A10] (2016-2018). www.eatenfish.com

CHRISTOPHER GRADY

Grady, C. (2015–2018). http://www.lunarbaboon.com/comics

Greene, J. (2016, August 2). GeekDad Q&A with ‘Lunarbaboon’ creator Chris Grady. GeekDad. https://geekdad.com/2016/08/lunarbaboon-chris-grady/

Hintze, G. (2017, June 29). Chris Grady's 'Lunar Baboon' comic spreads positivity while depicting mental health struggles. The Mighty. https://themighty.com/2017/06/chris-grady-lunar-baboon-ocd-comic-instagram/

JUSTIN GREEN

Wikipedia. (Last edited 2018, March 22). Binky Brown meets the Holy Virgin Mary. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binky_Brown_Meets_the_Holy_Virgin_Mary

Czerweic, M., Williams, I., Squier, S.M., Green, M.J., Myers, K., & Smith, S. (2015). Graphic medicine manifesto. Pennsylvania State University Press.

Levin, B. (1998). Rice, beans and Justin Greens. The Comics Journal, 203, 101–107. 

Manning, S. (2010, January 22). Justin Green on Binky Brown. CBR. https://www.cbr.com/justin-green-on-binky-brown/

Teenyfrahoop (2013, June 11). Justin Green talks about his graphic novel "Binky Brown". Amadora, Portugal, 2012 [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bcUy7GheB0Y.

JUDY HORACEK

Horacek, J. (2013). I am woman hear me draw. National Museum of Australia.

Horacek. J. (2009–2018). https://horacek.com.au/

MICHAEL LEUNIG

Leunig, M. (2018). https://www.leunig.com.au

Kohn, R. (2004, May 30). Leunig: No pussyfooting. ABC. http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/spiritofthings/leunig-no-pussyfooting/3412708#transcript

MANDY ORD

Ord, M. (2011). Sensitive creatures. Allen & Unwin.

Ord, M. (2022). https://www.mandyord.com/

CHARLES SHULTZ

Schultz, C. (1999). Charles Shultz on the 50th anniversary of 'Peanuts [Video]. Today. https://www.today.com/video/charles-schulz-reflects-on-the-50th-anniversary-of-peanuts-1072518211968?v=railb&,

BEN SNAKEPIT

Snakepit, B. (2007). My life in a jugular vein: Snakepit comics 2004–2006. Microcosm Publishing.

Snakepit, B. (2015, December 30). Interview with Ben Snakepit. Silver Sprocket. http://www.silversprocket.net/2015/12/30/ben-snakepit-has-been-making-daily-diary-comics/

ART SPIEGELMAN

Spiegelman, A. (1991). Maus. Pantheon Books.

Spiegelman, A. (2013). Co-mix: A retrospective of comics, graphics, and scraps. Drawn + Quarterly.

Dreifus, C. (2018, April 13). ‘Drawing is always a struggle’: An interview with Art Spiegelman. The New York Review. https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/04/13/drawing-is-always-a-struggle-an-interview-with-art-spiegelman/

Nolan, T. (2013). The complete Maus: Art Spiegelman. Insight Publications.