ABSTRACT

This book investigates how graphic medicine enables sufferers of mental illness to visualise the intricacies of their internal mindscape through visual metaphors and reclaim their voice amidst stereotyped and prejudiced assumptions of mental illness as a disease of deviance and violence.

In this context, by using Lakoff and Johnson’s conceptual metaphor theory (CMT), this study uncovers the broad spectrum of the mentally ills’ experiences, a relatively undertheorised area in medical humanities. The aim is to demonstrate that mentally ill people are often represented as either grotesquely exaggerated or overly romanticised across diverse media and biomedical discourses. Further, they have been disparaged as emotionally drained and unreasonable individuals, incapable of active social engagements and against the healthy/sane society.

The study also aims to unsettle the sanity/insanity binary and its related patterns of fixed categories of normal/abnormal, which depersonalise the mentally ill by critically analysing seven graphic narratives on mental illness.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|19 pages

Drawing Illness

History, Theory, and the Development of Graphic Medicine

chapter 4|24 pages

Nobody Memoirs as Counter-Discourse

Bipolar Disorder and Its Metaphors

chapter 5|17 pages

Visual Metaphors of OCD and Schizophrenia

chapter 6|16 pages

Visualising the Fragmented Selves

Conventional and Creative Metaphors of Depression

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion