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G. M. (Mark) Baker's avatar

This business of different media being suited to telling different kinds of stories is a fascinating one. The difference is quite obvious when people make movies of books. They are simply not the same.

In the case of movies vs novels, I believe that the base difference is that a movie is addressed to the senses, whereas a novel is addressed to memory. In this sense, the novel is able to bypass the raw input processing of the senses and thus create a more guided experience, balancing immediacy and reflection in ways a movie cannot achieve.

Insofar as graphic novels occupy some kind of half way house between the two, it raises an interesting question of the extent to which they are addressed to the senses vs. addressed to memory. The case of expressing the broken bottle with the visual and relying on the reader to supply the sound is a case of appealing to memory. But the rest of the scene is an appeal to the senses.

Of course, the senses themselves rely on memory in order to make sense of what they see. It is never all sense and no memory. But a novel quiets the senses in a way that allows reflection and experience to operate simultaneously, producing a unique artistic experience. I suspect that a graphic novel does not mute the senses enough to have that effect.

A movie, on the other hand, can bombard the senses in a way that will come close to quieting memory and casting the viewer into an immediacy of noise and light. The graphic novel cannot do that either.

Does this mean that the graphic novel falls between two stools? Or does it mean that it discovers its own fine balance of sense and memory? The former most of the time, in my experience, but maybe the Bill Waterson examples make the case for its ability to do the latter on occasion.

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Adrian P Conway's avatar

Artist friend drew a lovely ‘wordless’ story some of which can be viewed here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B011BH9O70/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_tkin_p1_i1. The absence of words in this tale really works. It can be a powerful medium. Thanks for the article, William.

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