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Digital archive of theses discussed at the University of Pisa

 

Thesis etd-01022021-144747


Thesis type
Tesi di laurea magistrale
Author
FLORIS, FRANCESCO
URN
etd-01022021-144747
Thesis title
La Mutilazione del Fumetto in Providence di Alan Moore, Jacen Burrows e Kurt Hathaway
Department
FILOLOGIA, LETTERATURA E LINGUISTICA
Course of study
LINGUE, LETTERATURE E FILOLOGIE EURO - AMERICANE
Supervisors
relatore Prof.ssa Dell'Aversano, Carmen
correlatore Prof. Grilli, Alessandro
Keywords
  • Alan Moore
  • Comics
  • Comics Theory
  • Cosmic Horror
  • Fumetto
  • Horror
  • Howard Phillips Lovecraft
  • Weird Fiction
Graduation session start date
29/01/2021
Availability
Withheld
Release date
29/01/2091
Summary
Cosmic or Lovecraftian horror revolves around the concept of inspiring terror without ever giving a complete description of the object of fear. This mechanism was formalized by the eponymous founder of the genre (Lovecraft 1927); it has, however, encountered significant obstacles in its transcodification to visual media. One reason is that, while prose writing disposes of an array of instruments for avoiding description, figurative arts have a greater challenge to face. This is mostly evident in cinema: even though Lovecraft’s influence is paramount to contemporary movie horror, it is difficult to find direct adaptations.
Nevertheless, comics have shown a tendency to confront the challenging nature of cosmic horror. Many visual solutions to the problem of representing the indescribable have been developed: showing hints of the monstrous, characters’ reactions, or negative spaces. However, these solutions tackled cosmic horror modelling it on the structure of prose, in a case of remediation (Bolter, Grusin 1999) of a genre strongly based on prose or poetry.
Providence (Moore, Burrows, Hathaway 2015) is a work of Moorian revisionism (Bilotta 2019) on the Lovecraftian canon. This text shows formal solutions that rely on the very structure of comics language - going beyond remediation, towards a new horror grammar for visual arts. In Providence, the ‘indescribable’ is conveyed by bending the mechanics of sequential storytelling. The result is a narrative form that delivers horror using instruments unavailable to prose writing: comic book structural elements such as panel borders, panel format, lettering, and gutters are used as powerful instruments to guide the reader’s emotional response.
This case might show how cosmic horror has the potential to cross medial borders without losing its specificity – in fact becoming a transmedial genre that exploits each language’s own pivotal instruments (Rajewsky 2018), without creating a hierarchy among them.
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