Needless
to say, as someone who believes in the power of communication through
the written and the visual so deeply that he will pay thousands upon
thousands of dollars to learn about it, this kind of conundrum is the
type that keeps me awake and thinking at night. (or at least, hypothetically would, if the crush of senior classes didn't knock me out on the living room floor before I can even get to
the bed.) As I was reading McCloud, the passage on the simplification
of cartoons allowing for greater transfer of emotional empathy struck
extremely close to home. While I thought the 'masking' theory he
explores was rather tangental (wonderfully interesting, but not really
tied to the core of what the chapter was he was talking about), the
continuum he presents between complex images to simple images to simple
words to complex words was fascinating. It made me think of all
the different kinds of combinations there are of this continuum out
there: photo-essays combine photographs on the hyperreal end of the
visual spectrum and very complex words; infographics and similar use
very simple images and very complex words; captions in photo-books or
art galleries provide very simple words with very complex pictures,
etc.
But then there seems to be another way to break off
of this continuum altogether. For example, complex words do not
inherently mean complex ideas.
Put another way, the words themselves are
not the only images at play in a piece of writing. The images that you
conjure with your words also contribute to what a reader 'sees'. In
other words, I think that there is less difference on the writing end of
things than McCloud would have us believe. Some of the greatest poets I
know (W.S. Merwin, Mark Strand, even Eliot at his more restrained) make
terrific, mind-boggling imagery out of words that you could read at the
end of elementary school. In other words, in trying to convey our inner
feelings most effectively, is it better to keep your language
keyed-down and simple? We are always told to 'show not tell' but is the
best way to 'show' in fact to show *less*? I have a hypothesis that the
reason writing and radio are said to be more stimulating and engaging
than television is because they demand more creation on the part of the
viewer; by communicating less to us, they are actually communicating
more. The more of an idea we have to create for ourselves (our role as a
viewer of texts that McCloud describes) the more connected we feel to a
text -- the more we feel like the idea is our own, or at least
something we can feel as our own. Here perhaps is where that tangental
theory of masking McCloud describes could get a second life: the
incredibly obscure, non-realistic "images" that combinations of words
present are links to our own experiences. We can inhabit them, like
simplified cartoon drawings, and through our ownership of them can feel
them as our own.
If only we could know what people really mean... |
I thought what you said about radio and writing was particularly interesting. I never thought of those entities as far as what they require of the viewer. Also, I agree with, "by communicating less to us, they are actually communicating more." Though I think it depends somewhat on the viewer. If I choose to engage in something more intimately, then I'm likely to receive far more information. So, if a viewer allows themselves to consider something like a piece of text or radio discussion for more than just what it is saying, then the text/discussion will succeed in greater communication. If not, then a lot of the material is lost.
ReplyDeleteMaybe if we think of complex words not necessarily meaning complex ideas, we can apply the same theory to McCloud. Comic representation of a text doesn't necessarily mean that he is dealing with "comic" ideas. Though McCloud is talking about comics in general, he isn't making widespread references to the kinds of stories that are generally told via comics. There has yet to be a mention of comics and the moral values they're supposed to contain; the uplifting stories about defeating evil and restoring order to the protected populace. When we're working in that medium, using comics makes sense. It adds to the experience of reading the comic, but when we pull that mode out of context, can we apply it to other genres without losing something? Do we gain anything? I feel like McCloud is fighting a stereotype without actually addressing the basis for that stereotype.
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