Keep Your Head in the Gutter: Engendering Empathy Through Participatory Delusion in Christian de Metter’s Graphic Adaptation of Shutter Island [Book Review]

Journal of Medical Humanities 36 (3):181-198 (2015)
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Abstract

This paper argues that the graphic adaptation of Dennis Lehane’s Shutter Island utilizes the medium to evoke an affective participation and investment from the reader. It explores the ways the graphic novel overcomes problematic representations of mental illness in the popular film version. Drawing on graphic fiction theory, I contend that readers’ engagement in and construction of the story between panels, in the “gutters,” allows them to participate in the protagonist’s persecutory delusion. Additionally, I draw on Foucault’s conceptualizations of the medical gaze and historical figurations of madness connected to water in order to demonstrate the mechanism by which the reader is placed in a dual subject position, becoming both observer and observed. In this capacity, I suggest that graphic fiction provides a unique experience to engender empathy for psychiatric illness

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References found in this work

The Subject and Power.Michel Foucault - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (4):777-795.
History of Madness.Michel Foucault - 1961/2006 - Routledge.
The work of art in the age of its technological reproducibility, and other writings on media.Walter Benjamin - 2008 - Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. Edited by Michael William Jennings, Brigid Doherty, Thomas Y. Levin & E. F. N. Jephcott.

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