Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a Voice

In the graphic narrative Dumb: Living Without a Voice (2018), Canadian cartoonist Georgia Webber explores her acquired physical disability after a severe vocal injury leaves her voiceless. As a talkative, social young woman working as a café server, Georgia’s life is interrupted when she is forced t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Coral Anaid Díaz Cano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2022-10-01
Series:Canada and Beyond
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/30645
_version_ 1811186950735921152
author Coral Anaid Díaz Cano
author_facet Coral Anaid Díaz Cano
author_sort Coral Anaid Díaz Cano
collection DOAJ
description In the graphic narrative Dumb: Living Without a Voice (2018), Canadian cartoonist Georgia Webber explores her acquired physical disability after a severe vocal injury leaves her voiceless. As a talkative, social young woman working as a café server, Georgia’s life is interrupted when she is forced to adapt herself to a different way of navigating the world. Previous scholarly work has analyzed Dumb to articulate a connection between comics theory and disability rhetoric (Dolmage and Jacobs 2016) and explored its fruitful linkage between voice/voicelessness and identity (Venkatesan and Dastidar 2020). Building on the path opened by these scholars, the aim of this paper is to critically examine the representation of disability and its engagement with the concept of crip time in Dumb by drawing on the interdisciplinary fields of disability studies, crip theory, and comics theory. The first section of this paper will build on Alison Kafer’s formulation of the strange temporalities of disability (2013) to investigate the ways in which Webber constructs non-conventional layouts where she incorporates different formal elements to present Georgia’s lived experience of disability as a disruption of conventional temporalities. Special attention will be paid to the endless, frustrating routine of paperwork to apply for disability welfare that the protagonist faces when her condition renders her unable to work. In the second section, I will draw on the work of Ellen Samuels (2017) to examine how Webber negotiates her shifting identity by graphically splitting her embodied self on the page, composing a parallel timeline where she visualizes her pre-disabled and disabled selves. The power of the pictorial is also extended to Webber’s clever usage of color: while her cartoonish drawings appear in black and white, she employs red to draw Georgia’s inner voice and her pain. Finally, my last section will employ the conception of crip time developed by Petra Kuppers (2014) to explore Georgia’s reconnection with herself through her breathing exercises and her orientation towards artistic creativity. Overall, I will argue that Dumb does not present a narrative of recovery, as Georgia does not heal from her injury but engages instead with her disabled existence by turning inwards and depicting her voice (lessness).
first_indexed 2024-04-11T13:53:40Z
format Article
id doaj.art-62b07ef1e30d4d7387af06d6083d5a8b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2254-1179
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-11T13:53:40Z
publishDate 2022-10-01
publisher Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca
record_format Article
series Canada and Beyond
spelling doaj.art-62b07ef1e30d4d7387af06d6083d5a8b2022-12-22T04:20:26ZengEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaCanada and Beyond2254-11792022-10-011193010.14201/candb.v11i9-3036109Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a VoiceCoral Anaid Díaz Cano0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8350-0435University of La LagunaIn the graphic narrative Dumb: Living Without a Voice (2018), Canadian cartoonist Georgia Webber explores her acquired physical disability after a severe vocal injury leaves her voiceless. As a talkative, social young woman working as a café server, Georgia’s life is interrupted when she is forced to adapt herself to a different way of navigating the world. Previous scholarly work has analyzed Dumb to articulate a connection between comics theory and disability rhetoric (Dolmage and Jacobs 2016) and explored its fruitful linkage between voice/voicelessness and identity (Venkatesan and Dastidar 2020). Building on the path opened by these scholars, the aim of this paper is to critically examine the representation of disability and its engagement with the concept of crip time in Dumb by drawing on the interdisciplinary fields of disability studies, crip theory, and comics theory. The first section of this paper will build on Alison Kafer’s formulation of the strange temporalities of disability (2013) to investigate the ways in which Webber constructs non-conventional layouts where she incorporates different formal elements to present Georgia’s lived experience of disability as a disruption of conventional temporalities. Special attention will be paid to the endless, frustrating routine of paperwork to apply for disability welfare that the protagonist faces when her condition renders her unable to work. In the second section, I will draw on the work of Ellen Samuels (2017) to examine how Webber negotiates her shifting identity by graphically splitting her embodied self on the page, composing a parallel timeline where she visualizes her pre-disabled and disabled selves. The power of the pictorial is also extended to Webber’s clever usage of color: while her cartoonish drawings appear in black and white, she employs red to draw Georgia’s inner voice and her pain. Finally, my last section will employ the conception of crip time developed by Petra Kuppers (2014) to explore Georgia’s reconnection with herself through her breathing exercises and her orientation towards artistic creativity. Overall, I will argue that Dumb does not present a narrative of recovery, as Georgia does not heal from her injury but engages instead with her disabled existence by turning inwards and depicting her voice (lessness).https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/30645georgia webberdumbcanadian comicsgraphic narrativedisability studiesdisabilityillnesscrip time
spellingShingle Coral Anaid Díaz Cano
Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a Voice
Canada and Beyond
georgia webber
dumb
canadian comics
graphic narrative
disability studies
disability
illness
crip time
title Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a Voice
title_full Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a Voice
title_fullStr Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a Voice
title_full_unstemmed Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a Voice
title_short Splitting Selves: Crip Time and the Temporalities of Disability in Georgia Webber’s Dumb: Living Without a Voice
title_sort splitting selves crip time and the temporalities of disability in georgia webber s dumb living without a voice
topic georgia webber
dumb
canadian comics
graphic narrative
disability studies
disability
illness
crip time
url https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/30645
work_keys_str_mv AT coralanaiddiazcano splittingselvescriptimeandthetemporalitiesofdisabilityingeorgiawebbersdumblivingwithoutavoice