Articles
A selection of my recent publications.
Discordance, duplicity, and desire: conjoined twins in Dame Darcy’s Meat Cake
Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics
Volume 8, 2017 - Issue 5
This article examines the characterisation of conjoined twins Hindrance and Perfidia within the fantastic story world of Dame Darcy’s Meat Cake. These comics expand roles and make room for twinned characters on terms differentiated from the constraints of past visual depictions of conjoined twins. The fanciful nature of this female-centric world normalises the twins’ anomalous bodies, thus allowing them to explore emotions and actions typically deemed off limits. Furthermore, connections are made between Hindrance and Perfidia and actual conjoined twins to indicate when Darcy’s representations speak back to ‘freak’ histories. Ultimately, via expressions of anger and sexuality and constructions of alternative female communities for both normative-bodied people and their conjoined brethren, the twins of Meat Cake enjoy a fluidity of identity rarely allowed in visual treatments of ‘freaked’ and Othered bodies.
“The Human Specimen: Nonfiction Representations of Conjoined Twins”
Journal: Comunicazioni Sociali (2015)
Although representational platforms have changed since audiences took pleasure from gazing curiously at conjoined twins in sideshows, representations of conjoined twins remain a staple of nonfiction television. This article looks at several nonfiction television shows that relegate conjoined twins to scientific specimens, rather than humans, and how singleton ideals and biases are projected on to them. Alice Domurat Dreger says singletons, or single-bodied people, “understand psychosocial individuality as requiring anatomical individuality” and these ideals help maintain “order” through predictability. These singleton standards reveal themselves in what the shows privilege – scientific discovery, separation and independence – in large part via voiceover. The shows’ visuals, however, often compete with the master narrative; images of capable, though anomalous, bodies counter claims of incompetence. Instead of being seen as humans, conjoined twins are construed as specimens in need of scientific explanation and restructuring, resulting in the heroic doctor figures whom José van Dijck’s work describes, while the narratives reflect Rosemarie Garland Thomson’s notion that “error” replaced “wonder” as modern science, medicine, and ethics evolved since the nineteenth century. Surgical advancements, equipment and doctors often overshadow the twins, and individual lives are privileged above all else. These shows project “error” onto conjoined twins (sometimes literally) and narratively resolve the scientific problem that the twins’ bodies pose. The voiceover again undermines the visuals, indicating an investment in “error” and scientific progress over human agency; even though conjoined twins have adapted to their bodies, they are characterized as “struggling”. Examining these nonfiction representations of conjoined twins foregrounds how “being human” is more complicated for those with anomalous bodies who must constantly negotiate scientific discourses and social demands while endeavoring to be seen as people at all in the face of overriding narratives about their humanity.
A Double concerto: Sean and Cristian as Singled-Bodied Conjoined Twins
Nip/Tuck: Television That Gets Under Your Skin (Reading Contemporary Television)
This chapter looks at the episode "Rose and Raven Rosenberg," which features real conjoined twins in a dramatic separation narrative. Through this narrative of doubles, Sean and Christian play out fantasies to discover, essentially, that they too are two parts of one whole.
Available at online booksellers and the publisher's website: ibtauris.com
FROM CALLING “ACTION” TO COMMUNITY ACTION: THE MILWAUKEE FILM FESTIVAL’S CONVERSATION SERIES
Synoptique journal Vol 3 No 2
This article reviews the Milwaukee Film Festival's Conversations series of post-screening discussions meant to inspire audience engagement with the Milwaukee community. Preliminary data is analyzed to see who attends these conversations and if they are bridging diverse populations in Milwaukee, the most segregated metropolitan area in the United States.