Recently, I asked for help with my dissertation research. I received a couple of responses, which were much appreciated, but I also received something else. I had used the term “genre”
in connection with comic books and graphic novels in my original posting and
was subsequently politely reminded by a couple of people that comic books and
graphic novels are a “medium” not a genre and to please use the term medium in
future postings, work, etc. Well, it was an easy edit to fix my call for
help so I did; however, as I thought more about this distinction, I began to
wonder what purpose it was serving.
As a community of scholars and teachers interested in promoting the use of comic books and graphic novels in the classroom, the
purpose of using the term medium I believe is to emphasize that comic books and
graphic novels are a mode of expression/communication. Furthermore, this designation is appropriate
because one of the definitions for medium is a middle state or condition, which
comic books and graphic novels would fulfill being that they are both text and
image and not either one exclusively. However, I also believe this designation
as a medium, despite being appropriate, can also be inadvertently undermining
the goal of promoting their use in the classroom and that using the term genre
instead of medium may provide an inroad into the classroom, because the word
genre suggests that the medium of comic books and graphic novels is a category within literature.
In schooling, print literacy is valued as the superior form of expression because it plays such a pivotal role in our ability to
function in our society. However, there
is an extensive amount of literature that argues that print literacy and
traditional literature are actually ideological and therefore function
hegemonically to preserve a particular cultural heritage (e.g. James Gee; Jenny
Cook-Gumperz; Madeleine Grumet). Interestingly, in order for print to
perform this function, this function must be obscured and ultimately
naturalized into our culture. For
example, one need only think about canonized texts and how they are assumed to
be the pinnacle of literature and this argument becomes evident. While this argument is not what this
particular post is about, it does help to preface my main point — by calling
comic books and graphic novels a medium as opposed to a genre, the emphasis is
placed on the form and therefore creates a distinction between it and the
medium of print. This distinction
exposes the medium of comic books and graphic novels as distinct from print
literacy and ultimately literature. Furthermore, this distinction is
problematic when trying to promote comic books and graphic novels as valid
forms of literature in the classroom, because it also exposes print as only one
of a myriad of modes of expression. This
exposure is considered dangerous to our cultural heritage and therefore
unacceptable.
Print, and by connection books, is not explicitly referred to as a medium in schools, because print has transcended this designation
through historical and sociocultural maneuverings driven primarily in our
civilization by schooling. Consequently the term medium is ultimately,
in schooling, reserved for other modes of communication typically considered
inferior to print such as the arts. A
consistent example of this mindset in schooling is how the arts are routinely marginalized
or dropped from the curriculum to add more time to reading, since reading is
tested. Therefore, emphasizing comic books and graphic novels as a medium in
conjunction with their clear use of images in the text, positions them as inferior
to print and therefore literature.
Tags:
© 2024 Created by Ryan Goble. Powered by