ABSTRACT

Drawing on a dynamic set of "graphic texts of girlhood," Elizabeth Marshall identifies the locations, cultural practices, and representational strategies through which schoolgirls experience real and metaphorical violence. How is the schoolgirl made legible through violence in graphic texts of girlhood? What knowledge about girlhood and violence are under erasure within mainstream images and scripts about the schoolgirl? In what ways has the schoolgirl been pictured in graphic narratives to communicate feminist knowledge, represent trauma, and/or testify about social violence? Graphic Girlhoods focuses on these questions to make visible and ultimately question how sexism, racism and other forms of structural violence inform education and girlhood. From picture books about mean girls like The Recess Queen or graphic novels like Jane, The Fox and Me to Ronald Searle’s ghastly pupils in the St. Trinian’s cartoons to graphic memoirs about schooling by adult women, such as Ruby Bridges’s Through My Eyes and Lynda Barry’s One Hundred Demons texts for and about the schoolgirl stake a claim in ongoing debates about gender and education.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part I|47 pages

Cultural Pedagogies of Girlhood

chapter 1|19 pages

Recess Queens

Mean Girls in Graphic Texts of Girlhood

chapter 2|13 pages

Nice White Girls

Violence and Racial Masquerade in Nancy Drew

chapter 3|13 pages

Picturing Rape Culture

Little Red Riding Hood and School Dress Codes

part II|58 pages

Resistant Schoolgirls

chapter 4|14 pages

De-schooling Girlhood

Fairy Tales and Trauma in Lynda Barry’s Comics

chapter 5|14 pages

Activist Schoolgirls

Documenting Segregation and Residential Schooling in Auto/biographical Picture Books

chapter 6|13 pages

Reframing Schoolgirls

Social Violence and Justice in Words and Pictures

chapter 7|15 pages

Final Lessons

Reading Like a Girl