Graphic ethnography is on the rise! In a brief introduction we will explore how anthropological research has been presented in comic book genres, both historically and in contemporary writing. Participants will be able to engage with sample materials from a range of styles and comics traditions. Then, we will explore the creation of sequential art as a tool and medium for communicating research. Can sequential art be used to convey the value of ethnographic insights? What are the practical and theoretical opportunities and limitations of this tool, especially in comparison to traditional research outputs and the conventions of ethnographic writing?
Speakers
Caroline Schuster is Associate Professor at the School of Archaeology and Anthropology, as well as Co-Director of the Australian National Centre for Latin American Studies, at the Australian National University. Her research interests include value, credit and debt, development policy and NGOs, finance and climate change, gender and kinship. Her graphic novel “Forecasts: A Story of Weather and Finance at the Edge of Disaster” was published in 2023.
Chitra Venkatarami is a lecturer in the College of Arts and Sciences at the Australian National University. Chitra works in science and technology studies and human-environmental relationships, and her first book, Drawing Coastlines: Climate Anxieties and the Visual Reinvention of Mumbai’s Shore, is an ethnographic account of how technoscientific images create coasts and coastal futures.