Nature.com Examines Kate Beaton’s “Ducks” and the Intersection Between Enviral Degredation and Human Suffering

Nature.com gives an in-depth, academic and entirely overwritten analysis of the often overlooked connection between degredation of the environment and human suffering. Yes it does. Worth it once you get past the plethora of unneccessary and obfuscating sixteen-syllable words. No typos tho, so there’s that.

Ok I am being cheeky here but the article honestly is interesting in that it puts Ducks in a broader context of work you wouldn’t normally think it would belong to.

From the article:


This article examines the multifaceted realities of the Oil Sands industry in Kate Beaton’s graphic memoir Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands (2022). The visual-verbal narrative of Ducks illustrates how the oil sands serve not only as a backdrop but also as a metaphor for societal structures that marginalize women and perpetuate broader issues such as sexism and mental health neglect. Focusing on the lived experiences of laborers, women in particular, the article engages with the themes of sexism, labor, and environmental degradation endemic to oil boomtowns. Utilizing Rebecca Scherr’s concept of grounding in graphic novels, the article further inspects the intricate relationship between human subjects and their spatial context, revealing how physical environments reflect and reinforce gendered dynamics. Through close inspection of Beaton’s narrative, this article underscores the often-overlooked intersection of environmental degradation and individual suffering, positing that grounding fortifies the narrative’s thematic depth.


Read the rest here!

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