The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes in Contemporary Comics Vera J. Camden American Imago, Volume 77, Number 3, Fall 2020, pp. 603-638 (Article) Published by Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aim.2020.0031 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/765865 [ Access provided at 23 Oct 2020 21:38 GMT from Fondren Library, Rice University ] VERA J. CAMDEN The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes in Contemporary Comics In a 2017 New York Times article, Jonah Bromwich asks the question: “Why are all of our words in bubbles?” Pointing to the decision by Apple, Facebook, and Twitter to put all messages in the comics form of bubbles, he notes how the rounded edges convey a softer, more receptive graphic format in which to receive information. So, Bromwich consults comics expert Scott McCloud, who explains the psychology of such a graphic design decision: “bubbles created a consistent amount of negative space around words, which was desirable from a graphic standpoint.” Bromwich then suggests, “The rounded edges of text bubbles also gave messages a soft, friendly connotation. That’s an element especially useful in texted communication, where tone and body language are absent” (2017). Such negative space in the text bubble cushions the ambiguity or other anxious effects of uncontained text, softening the sharp edges of letters by friendly, rounded shapes. The rounded shapes of a Facebook Messenger or iMessage text derive from the comics page; the rounded shapes of thought bubbles and speech balloons draw forth “tone and body language.” Yet the thought bubble and the speech balloon are quite distinct devices and serve very different functions in the comics medium. My discussion of the vicissitudes of thought bubbles pivots on the uniqueness of this comics convention. As I take up the particularly embattled fate of the thought bubble in contemporary comics, my claim will be that the current, demonstrable trend in mainstream comics publishing to banish this friendly and familiar vehicle of expression in comics not only limits the expressive range of comics as a medium, but also, from a psychoanalytic standpoint, reveals a reaction against and a purging of affect and thought itself from the comics page. I will conclude by gathering up a few American Imago, Vol. 77, No. 3, 603–638. © 2020 by Johns Hopkins University Press 603 604 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 1. Sina Grace, Nothing Lasts Forever, 2017, p. 77. Vera J. Camden 605 hopeful and creative examples of contemporary comics that deliberately resist the trends of corporate comics publishers. While keeping up with current comics style, these comics artists deliberately retain the centrality of the thought bubble and the complex internal life to which it points. The parallel grammar of comics and text messages juxtaposed on the page from Sina Grace’s graphic memoir, Nothing Lasts Forever, shows the thought bubble and the speech balloon in spontaneous reciprocity (Figure 1). But this dynamic also highlights that the two devices are different: they come from different places in the comics’ character and they work differently in the narrative progression. The thought bubble precedes the text message. It is literally in a bubble and private—we can see rotating bubbles when someone is typing a response to our message, suggesting the other person is now thinking. The text message encapsulated in a shape akin to the speech balloon records thought—as in diary keeping—but it is not thought. The text message has the status of speech in this comic. It aims to replicate speech with its back and forth pattern. Thought, on the other hand, leads to more thought, associatively, and unless it is put into words and speech, privately. The play between the thought bubbles and the speech balloons in this panel capture how the character’s internal anxiety, desire for support, and hope for a response gets conveyed in speech in the immediacy of the move from internal to external. As suggested by this comics panel, Grace debates whether or not to text his ex-boyfriend, Cash. Through the dialogue of texts, he realizes that he needs Cash. The thought bubbles provide access to the internal pain of the character and his neurotic thoughts, while his texts translate almost instantaneously into text message “speech balloons” that reach out to his friend. Both devices reveal human motivation, both depict human desire, and both, as Grace says, “advance the narrative, in any event” (2017, p. 77). But this contemporary example clearly illustrates the contrast between the two different domains of process and product. Thought bubbles have traditionally functioned in comics to offer insight into the life of a character even as creators advance the narrative through speech and action. Grace’s bubbles, though, may well remind readers of 606 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes a time when the use of the thought bubble was pervasive in mainstream comics when neurotic heroes like Spider-Man spent much of their time conflicted over life as a hero and a citizen (Figure 2). For example, Spider-Man simultaneously speaks with Norman Osborn, the Green Goblin, and wonders to himself how to resolve the conflict that his greatest villain is also his best friend’s father.1 Though Spider-Man may be famous for his internal conflicts, they were not particular to him, indeed, one need only open any issue of most mainstream comics from before 2000 and will be flooded by images of characters deep in thought, surrounded by as many bubbles as soda pop, and poised for action or an encounter with a new plot element.2 For example, in the image of Storm with her hands elevated, the bubble directs the reader down the page into Storm’s feelings as she comes to terms with the loss of her mutant powers and learns to live with herself in this new life (Figure 3). The striking illustration of Barry Windsor-Smith accompanied by the internal processes written in the bubbles by Chris Claremont give us insight into the character and slows down our process as readers as we think about this character and engage with her internal thought. To offer another instance, the thought bubble emanating from Supergirl shows her concluding desperately that if she cannot solve this mystery, she will not succeed (Figure 4). The bubble once again connects us to internal feeling. Such uses of the thought bubble may now feel out of date, but they gave the reader a sense of suspense, anxiety, even personal security as they offered insight into the character’s private desire, dreams, and dread.3 In an example that brings together the threads of this discussion, the Psychoanalysis comics series of the 1950s, which were printed for a short time in the heyday of both comics and psychoanalysis, utilized the thought bubble to advance their narratives of “remembering, repeating, and working through” (Freud, 1958 [1914]). With the popularization of the psychoanalytic treatment in comic books,4 the direct connection to psychoanalytic practice seems obvious because thought, associations and feelings are brought into the room; the plot is dependent upon putting thoughts into words. In these comics, action is “inter-action,” contained in the fantasies and the memories that come to be narrated in the consulting room. Vera J. Camden Figure 2. Stan Lee and John Romita, Amazing Spider-Man #40, 1966, p. 17. 607 608 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 3. Chris Claremont and Barry Windsor Smith, Uncanny X-men #198, 1985, p. 23. Vera J. Camden 609 Figure 4. Cary Bates, Artie Saaf, and Vince Colletta, Supergirl #3, 1973, p. 1. 610 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 5. Daniel Keyes and Jack Kamen, Psychoanalysis #1, 1955, p. 5. The analyst’s thoughts are stirred up by the boy and his family. He must internally process the feelings brought into the room and then will proceed to offer an interpretation from this internalization of feeling, stimulating thought, then turned into speech (Figure 5). The place of thought so interestingly finessed in Grace’s contemporary graphic memoir, and so centrally placed in the classic comics described above, now presents us with a comics-situation: for I have noticed that the thought bubble is currently being burst, is under erasure, and out of fashion in contemporary mainstream comics. The thought bubble is being purged from comics production at the behest of mainstream editors who push comics creators to move from thinking to showing. Many creators welcome this trend as signifying increasing sophistication in the comics medium, while others mourn and even resist the demise of its familiar, friendly streams of bubbles. And despite the fact that attitudes toward this change in comics style of representation vary from creator to creator, a mere glance at comics of the last few decades demonstrates that contemporary trends have privileged a disembodied narrative voice which describes and determines all internal motivation in boxes above or amidst the comics panel, more prominent now that the thought bubble has all but disappeared. If Scott McCloud points to the bubble not just as a tool but something that “softens” and in that sense eases our anxiety, the narrative Vera J. Camden 611 box does something different. It is not soft, but rather sharp in its utilitarian presence. Justin Green in conversation with other comics creators reflected on such a contrast in representation of thought in his own work, saying, I don’t know if you noticed, but old Superman comics have little panels at the top that say later, or soon, next day. Well, I turned that into the narrative voice [box] where I would stack several lines of copy. But then I realized, I’m hiding up there. That’s my voice, but I can show something below that either contradicts it or amplifies it. And on top of that, not only do I get to put balloons into character’s mouths, but there are thought balloons. (Nelson, 2014, p. 86)5 Such uses of the thought bubble—exemplary in Green’s pioneering, vastly influential and deeply psychological work, Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary—is lost in the trends of the new comics’ page. This most recognizable, signature element of the comics page that uniquely offers unmediated access to human interiority has become threatened with abandonment. Thus, while the speech balloon has retained preeminence, revealing character, showing motivation and propelling action, the thought bubble’s diminished place signals, I will suggest, a larger turn away from thought itself. In his recent lament upon our troubled times, Meaning and Melancholia: Life in the Age of Bewilderment, Christopher Bollas describes Western culture of the past five decades or so as suffering from a “thought phobia.” Indeed, he has noticed a trend among patients who are “generally uninterested in the examination of the inner world.” To diagnose this trend, Bollas uses E.M. Forster’s Henry Wilcox from Howard’s End as an early exemplar of the unreflective defense against self-knowledge. Bollas clarifies that Forster’s famous entreaty to “only connect” is not referring to human relationship but rather, and importantly, to human thought and language. As such, his clarification provides an inviting analysis of the formal shifts discussed here in comics and becomes a departure point for this article. Bollas makes plain that it is the linking of thought to feeling and to language in all of its forms that provides the 612 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes foundation for human meaning in a culture that advances profit and material productivity over meaning making. When blindness trumps insight as the most efficient way to maintain cool and composure in a bewildering world, Forster implores us through the character of Mrs. Wilcox to “[l]ive in fragments no longer.” Bollas interprets this phrase precisely: [Forster] alludes to a psychological catastrophe in selves who no longer feel internally integrated. Their inner life—as opposed to what they may say to others—is fragmented because a psychic division has occurred between feeling and speech. It is a rift felt most acutely in our inner narratives as we speak lived experience to our self. (2018, p. 24) Speaking lived experience to our selves—inner narratives— captures the matter that is contained in thought bubbles. The world of comics becomes, then, one place where this larger cultural shift away from inner life might be mapped. Bollas has long been interested in the problem of control in and of thought, but his recent work has taken up a symptomatic resistance to free association as a pervasive presentation of contemporary patients whose “new forms of thinking” signal a disturbing diminishment of inner and outer relatedness. And so, as he notes, “We are in urgent need of ways to understand and reorganize societies so that culture—frames of mind—can be steered toward more generative paths” (2018, p. xiii).6 The remnants of resistance among some comics artists whom I will discuss at the conclusion of this essay augur perhaps a return of the suppressed bubble, and of an appreciation of the interior life to which it refers—despite the push of corporate cultures and the fashion trends of the marketplace. This, in any case, is my hope. What’s in a Thought Bubble? The thought bubble by any other name might be the speech balloon: these two terms are familiar to comics creators, readers, critics, and even art historians, and are employed regularly and often interchangeably in criticism, partly because Vera J. Camden 613 of the interest of the drawn line itself. Comics lines offer affective guidance that correlate with written text, underscoring meaning to be sure but also providing a virtual orchestration of feeling and attitude. “In truth don’t all lines carry within them an expressive potential?” asks McCloud (1993, p. 124). Yet in discussions of comics, the floating between the two names of two distinct comics devices—the thought bubble and the speech balloon—is such that the two rounded shapes are often referred to interchangeably. Sometimes the terms are switched so that we hear of the thought balloon or speech bubble—and this confuses things utterly. But the two devices are very different. The thought bubble, by definition internal and silent, has conventionally been depicted almost exclusively with bubble dots leading from a character’s head up to a bubble filled with text or symbols. It is silent: it conveys thought. The stream of gradually ascending bubbles emanating from a character’s head or body toward the bigger bubble characterizes this device. The speech balloon, by contrast, generally is indicated by pointed peak or an arrow of some sort directed toward yet emanating from the character’s head, indicating speech.7 The balloon shape filled with text or symbols is spoken by a character, heard by the figures to whom it is spoken, and understood by the reader to be externally available, however muffled or compromised the sound might be.8 Yet the ambiguity, if not confusion around these shapes and what one calls them is itself revealing and will lead to further discussion of the thought bubble and the attack on thought in our contemporary moment. To illustrate this let us look at the study of comics by art historian David Carrier who astutely opines that, “The speech balloon is a great philosophical discovery, a method of representing thought and words” (2000, p. 4). We see here that Carrier, while wisely and appreciatively recognizing the importance of both devices, ends up collapsing them into one. He identifies the rounded shape as the defining elements of comics, but he does not differentiate between speech and thought in his analysis of speech balloons. His very book cover—which shows himself as a child with a thought bubble encircling the book’s title “The Aesthetics of Comics”— is somewhat misleading for he does not discuss the thought bubble (Figure 6). The book’s title page, by contrast, contains the same text, but this time in a speech balloon (Figure 7). 614 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 6. David Carrier, The Aesthetics of Comics, 2000, cover. Vera J. Camden Figure 7. David Carrier, The Aesthetics of Comics, 2000, title page. 615 616 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes It may well be, as Carrier says, that the genius of comics is that it can show thoughts and words explicitly and dramatically. Yet blurring of its devices somewhat undermines his analysis of the comics he so admires, since he aspires to plumb the depths and originality of what comics can accomplish philosophically.9 The ironic—and iconic—rendering by Roy Lichtenstein of “kitsch” characters captured the essence of comics for many cognoscenti of the art world. His artistic parody of the supposedly trite and sentimental inner life of the romance comic heroine certainly did not enact an appreciation of comics capacity to render human depth and may well have ended up demeaning the narrative device of the thought bubble for comics producers who wanted to achieve more sophistication. His riveting, larger than life renderings may be in part blamed for the trend away from the iconic bubbles that loom large in his massive blown up images. As the “comic” romance heroine reveals her thoughts, the bubbles that float from small to large above her head become a signature of cliché—even vacuity. Yet the vacuity that Lichtenstein creates by taking the bubble (and sometimes balloon) out of context on his broad and brilliant canvases should not, I aver, blind us to the power of the thought bubble or indeed to our own investment in thought—and feeling. Lichtenstein paraded and yet parodied a powerful tool by disconnecting the bubble from the body in thought, presenting his women as sentimentalists, detached from their context within meaningful narrative. But the bubble’s attachment to the body, through a stream or sequence of smaller bubbles, offers evidence of an interior life for that character, as yet unformulated in speech. The bubble represents a sheath or filter from the outside world of the comics’ page for the character. Crucially for the reader, the bubble offers a window into the character’s associative flow. In depictions of violence and trauma in comics, for example, there is a way in which the thought bubble may indeed ask the reader to pause and think about such actions, asking the reader to process the images they are witnessing. “We can not only see the character acting in the world, which in prose we cannot, we can also see into that person’s thoughts, which in theatre, movies, and television we cannot,” says Brad Reed (2015). The thought bubble slows down time, focusing Vera J. Camden 617 often on a human body, and asking us to take in that connection corporeally. Without the thought bubble, as Joe McCulloch has said, comics becomes more cool—and aloof (2010). Such a stance diminishes the philosophical capacity of comics: its access to the inner life of its characters. The Travails of the Thought Bubble The fate of the thought bubble has inspired a kind of ancients-versus-moderns debate on several comics blogs and critical commentaries(see Conway, 2020). With lamentation for what is lost on one side, and celebration for new trends and devices on the other, one sees a shift away from showing spontaneous, internal, complex thought of the character’s subjective state as captured within the thought bubble, and toward the narrative box—what some comics’ artists and critics have called the “diegetic horizon”—placed variously atop or within the comics page. The shift from the thought bubble imbricated as part of the image cluster on the comics panel, to a narrative box, shifts the reader’s focus from the character to disembodied reflective narration. The reader turns from the spontaneous interior life of the character to an overarching narrative voice, many times the voice of the character—not an omniscient narrator—but disembodied and separate from the character thinking. The diegetic horizon serves as a frame for the story, but not a spontaneous stopping point or an entry point into the character. As Hillary Chute remarks, “the diegetic horizon of each page made up of what are essentially boxes of time, lends graphic narratives a representational mode capable of taking up complex political and historical issues with an explicit, formal degree of self-awareness” (2010, p. 9). Some version of such a box serves a story telling function; it provides characters’ reflections and memory but necessarily removes internal association, feeling, or fantasy that is impulse driven, or unmediated. Such material is boxed in and controlled by a narrative function, marking it as a reflection but not freely associative. This shift away from a plain and immediate depiction of thought and toward a more delayed, remembered reflective 618 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes narration in comic books and graphic narratives, so prevalent in recent decades suggests an important trend that is displaying a shift in the depiction, description and desire of the human subject within comics. Of course, comics remains invested in the depiction of thought through diegetic narrators, but they lead the story, controlling and interpreting thought through a narrative presence; they do not offer the spontaneous, free associative thought that the bubble “floats”—bubble to bubble. The shift away from the thought bubble is more than a new style of characterization; it marks a new style of comics, which reflects our contemporary relationship with thought. The loss of the thought bubble impacts reader’s response and the affective range of comics capacity. What’s more, the resistance to the thought bubble enacts a kind of repetition compulsion, of what Christopher Pizzino has called an “autoclasm,” or a breakdown through traumatic inhibition or arrest (2016). Such autoclasm harkens back to early repression and denigration of comics as a medium that predicated a radical and traumatic blow to this “sensational” and “sentimental form” of literature.10 The autoclasm is not just in the stories that comics tell, but in the shapes of comics itself. The point here is not to eschew the inevitable new shapes and sizes of the narrative box or any of the infinitely various new styles or fashions of comics creativity, some of which recently have bled from the bubbles and balloons, unconstrained, into all corners of the page in an extraordinary and fecund revision of the forms of the comic book page. Thi Bui’s evocative rendering of the bubbles of dream are captured in a literal landscape of memory, drawing from comics history and innovating with astounding artistry how dream bubbles bring breath to her young child-self (Figure 8). Innovation of all sorts keeps the medium exciting and vital, quite obviously, but such control explicitly signals a “necessary” avoidance of a familiar and even revered form for containing thought in a shape that has lost its “cool” appeal.11 Drawing upon such historiography of comics informed by psychoanalytic theories of both repression and resistance, my suggestion is that the above mentioned New York Times article on the ways the graphic design of messaging platforms soften textual communication through the bubble is actually on to something Vera J. Camden Figure 8. Thi Bui, The Best We Could Do, 2017, p. 89. 619 620 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes about the effect of this shape, something that is endemic to comics history and essential to its literary and artistic hold over our imaginations. Let us consider, then,a story told by Stephen King who was instructed to “cut” the thought bubble from his foray into comics writing American Vampire comics for Vertigo, an imprint of DC Comics (Figure 9). In an interview with the Daily Beast, King notes he had as a kid read Superman, Batman, and early EC Comics, so upon being asked to write a comic book story, he drew from these early comics for his story in American Vampire. Unbeknownst to King, though, the signature device of comics that dominated the early forms of his youth no longer prevailed. He was told to eliminate the thought bubble. In the interview, King states, I got this kind of embarrassed call from the editors saying, “Ah, Steve, we don’t do that anymore.” “You don’t do that anymore?” I said. “No, when the characters speak, they speak. If they’re thinking, you try to put that across in the narration, in the little narration boxes.” (Donnelly, 2010) So, King rewrote his comic to fit the new style—though he still laments the loss of the thought bubble. “I think it’s a shame to lose that arrow out of your quiver” (Donnelly, 2010). But more importantly, King’s use of the word “embarrassed” to describe the phone call reveals something about how the mainstream comics companies feel about the bubble. Comics creator, Benjamin Marra remarks upon Stephen King’s loss of the use of the thought bubble in an interview for GQ capturing this feeling as he states, in an effort to make comics seem or appear more adult or legitimate and less like a comic book, they’ve gotten rid of thought balloons altogether, because they’re too iconographic—they reference peoples’ stereotypes of what a comic book is, while they’re reading it. I think that comic makers or publishing houses are afraid that readers might be quick to dismiss what they’re reading if they see a thought balloon in it. It’s really strange to me. (Pappademas, 2010) Vera J. Camden 621 There are several possible reasons for editors excising the thought bubble that these creators already identify. Perhaps thought bubbles seem “patronizing” because they spell out the obvious and detract from the energy of action. Scott McCloud himself has turned away from this device: The thought balloon, regardless of shape or style, just by virtue of its pointer, brings a third party into the relationship: the author, gently putting his/her hand on our shoulder and pointing to the face of the thinker with the words “he thought.” Maybe thoughts are just too private for that kind of parental intrusion. (2010) McCloud’s word choice bears our analysis: for if there is anything that will kill what is cool it is parental intrusion. He claims it is the “pointer” of the thought bubble that pokes in and peeks at what is going on in the mind. But this is precisely what the thought bubble does not do!12 And this is why it is important to get the names and shapes of things sorted out. The bubble shape depends upon the free floating, ascending, and graduated bubbles to convey the thoughts emanating from the character, not the pointer. Still and all, as McCloud rightly points out, and as Thi Bui’s evocative version of the bubble of a dream evokes the power of the thought bubble is that it reveals what is “private.” The idea that the character can have a private self that is defined distinctly from their public self, the self that is presented to other characters is an important distinction and a powerful element of comics. Readers bear witness to the different parts of the self that a character may have; thus, despite McCloud’s qualms with the bubble, his turn to privacy ironically captures the point. Thought bubbles offer a space for the private, that is to say, the inner self.13 Thierry Groensteen (2007/1999) refers to the “balloon” in general as a “the only element of the paginal apparatus on which the gaze definitively stops (except when leafing through the comics without reading it).” Marc Sumerak brings an editorial perspective from his days at Marvel Comics to these points when he reiterates in a recent personal interview what has now become a defining observation that the 622 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 9. Stephen King and Rafael Albuquerque, American Vampire #1, 2010, p. 21. Vera J. Camden 623 thought bubble works as a “pause on the page” (2018). Taking away the thought bubble asks the reader to think less about the mind of the individual who is in process of thinking— making it a less intimate reading experience. Some comics artists have argued against the editorial mandates in terms that illuminate our discussion. Barry Deutsch (2010), for instance, rejects the notion that thought bubbles are naïve. To the argument that [they are too] “cartoony” and that “sophisticated, literary comics want to avoid” them, he points out: “The irony, of course, is that thought [bubbles]— well used—can be an extremely sophisticated and subtle device. By arbitrarily cutting them out, editors may actually be making their comics less subtle and less sophisticated.” Others, equally illuminating, have ended up agreeing with such mandates. Alan Moore (2008), very influentially, in the Afterword to V for Vendetta describes a conflict with his illustrator: Dave [Lloyd] was giving me his ideas of […] the utter eradication of thought balloons […] As a writer, this terrified me […] without thought balloons, how was I going to get over all the nuances of character that I needed to make the book satisfying on a literary level? (p. 272) Yet he gives in. As comics readers now know, V for Vendetta was one of many of Moore’s books that did turn away from the thought bubble, and, incidentally, shaped a generation of creators. Brad Reed summarizes this generational influence: My overarching theory as to why the first-person narration caption took over for the thought balloon is that as the superhero genre aged, the effects created by first-person captions became better understood and appreciated, and the thought bubble’s immediacy and flavor of artificiality lost its appeal. (2015) In an interview, Marc Sumerak (2018) spoke to the fact that the thought bubble was put on a shelf along with many other elements of the comics page including the editorial notes, all in an effort to make way for the artists and focus on the com- 624 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes ics’ artists ability to tell a story. The editors wanted less clutter, more open space. This point is reiterated by Benjamin Marra (Klaehn, 2019), who I cite at length here on the subject of mainstream comics and the drives of the marketplace: mainstream comics insist on having “widescreen” panels so movie producers can better visualise them as films. Prohibiting thought balloons because they made the comic look too much like comics and thought balloons can’t be easily translated to film. In essence these practices are an expression of comics’ self-hatred. Nine-panel grids and thought balloons worked for some of the best stories ever told in the medium. Sacrificing tools that make comics a powerful storytelling medium in the hopes they might be blessed by a Hollywood studio. And I guess that has come true. (p. 8) This may create a “cooler” depiction of comics. Despite the push to render comics more seamless, cool and impermeable to raw rendering of internal thought and fantasy, the particular and blatant rendering of what is thought but not expressed may be harder to drive out than controlling editorial teams might imagine. Production companies may indeed push the thought bubble away, but comics is an art of memory. The repressed, as we should know by now, will always return. The Shape of the Bubble Comics has been, up until recently, shamefully associated with the juvenile (Pizzino, 2016, p. 73),14 however much they are now dominating the “conversation about literature and the self” (Chute, 2010, p. 26). A psychoanalytic interpretation of such relegation of comics to the realm of childhood will on the one hand agree: comics were, after all, banished and censored historically precisely because they had such magnetic power over children and thus such influence.15 Comics do appeal to the child in the view of whatever age because, on the other hand, as a medium they draw upon childhood attachment to Vera J. Camden 625 image and prelinguistic affective states. Indeed, Leslie Fiedler during the 1950s “witch hunt” against comics defended the victimized comics medium in terms that resonate with my argument. He opined that comics “remain close to the impulsive subliminal life [. . .] Behind the opposition to [such] vulgar literature, there is at work the [. . .] fear of the archetypal and unconscious itself [. . .]” (1955, pp. 19–20). As such, the thought bubble takes on a particularly suggestive place in the experience and the evolution of the comics medium. The shape of the bubble, in its soft and friendly way, offers a visual analogue to an emergent internal voice, bodily sense of containment, and the inner self. The shape of the thought bubble calls up the preverbal, infantile forms that developmentally adumbrate the emergence of speech in the growing child: from thought to word. Or as Lynda Barry puts it, comics “can raise the dead hours inside of us that nothing else can reach” (2008, p. 136). This “force field” (Chute, 2016, p. 168) leads directly to the core appeal of the thought bubble. This reach of comics invokes Julia Kristeva’s formulation of the semiotic chora behind yet also beyond linguistic speech, which relies on an image of internal space to capture that place located in the maternal body. The chora preexists the linguistic sign or the paternal signifier, redeeming the maternal in psychoanalytic thought.16 Her diverse depictions of the fate of the chora in “primal repression” offers uncanny resonance to the travails of the thought bubble—but also to its persistent appeal. Let us enter, for a moment, into that Freudian aporia called primal repression. Curious primacy, where what is repressed cannot really be held down, and where what represses already borrows its strength and authority from what is apparently very secondary: language. Let us therefore not speak of primacy but of the instability of the symbolic function in its most significant aspect—the prohibition placed on the maternal body (as a defense against autoeroticism and incest taboo). Here, drives hold sway and constitute a strange space that I shall name, after Plato (Timeus, 48–53), a chora, a receptacle. (Kristeva, 1982, pp. 13–14) 626 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Kristeva further states that the chora remains “unnamable, improbably, hybrid, anterior to naming, to the One, to the father, and consequently, maternally connoted” (1980, p. 133). Kristeva’s depiction of the chora partakes of the hybridity associated with the medium of comics, forever in tension between image and word, but also for the “strange space” of the chora connoting the maternal body. By such lights, the thought bubble in its maternal shape and in its function of depicting thought “anterior” to dialogue and even narration, partakes of the chora’s power, while it also endures its formal repression. And the bubble shape itself resonates with the body whose contours may be interpreted from its dimensions—whether like the brain folded and segmented or the more aesthetically inviting breast whose shape is both round and pointed at the same time. Thus, while the bracketed narrative boxes may indeed herald a shift in the evolution of comics through a narrative voice of authority, irony and omniscience,17 the explicit distancing of comics from the soft, naïve, or childlike expressions of kitsch ironically cuts off comics from its reference to a psychic energy core. The very form and structure of the comics’ page depends upon this signature device, insofar as the very body of the panels and pages document traumatic memory. Its abolishment runs the risk of casting off its affective impact. Once again Pizzino’s influential notion of the autoclasm reminds us that the memory of traumatic breakdown remains indelibly written into the very narrative structure and preoccupations of comics as a medium. Since comics as a cultural form came to be associated with children and, inevitably, juvenile delinquency resulting in the crackdown on comics instigated and carried forth in the clinical diatribes of Fredric Wertham (1954), this association is now repeated and imprinted in the very generic evolution of comics today, retaining all the traces of that political purge.18 While Pizzino does not take up the ways that the structure of the comics itself—the mechanisms of its visual and material shaping—also reflect this cultural trauma, it seems to me that the evolving architecture of comics page itself can reveal a similar history of breakdown. But taking his conception of traumatic memory one step further one can recognize, in the banishing of the bubble through editorial Vera J. Camden 627 mandates and fashionable trends, a repetition compulsion.19 The crackdown and breakdown endemic to comics history is repeated on the comics page. In this regard, D. W. Winnicott’s description of the “fear of breakdown” in clinical practice resonates with Pizzino’s notions when he writes, “I contend that clinical fear of breakdown is the fear of a breakdown that has already been experienced. It is a fear of the original agony which caused the defence organization which the patient displays as an illness syndrome” (1974, p. 104). Thus, in the world of comics, the editorial purge, the dread of the thought bubble as a childish device becomes a presenting fear of a breakdown that has already occurred. The troubled condition of comics is thus drawn out, paradoxically by cutting off from the body of the comics page the kind of spontaneous memory associations that are registered in thought bubbles. And in this sense comics as a medium becomes a register of contemporary culture in both its resistance to and registration of cultural memory. Only Resist If “[c]omics chronicle the twilight world, the liminal space between past and present, text and image, creator and reader” (Gardner, 2012, p. 176), then Art Spiegelman’s Breakdowns (2008), a compilation of early work coupled with retrospective comics dramatizes his own creative processes over the years, captures the link between memory, time, and thought. His pervasive and persistent uses of the thought bubble afford us an opportunity to introduce representative instances of how many comics artists resist the trend away from the thought bubble and thus not only retain its formal attributes in their work, but also retain access to its psychological power. In one vignette, Spiegelman creates a narrative of “Memory Hole,” an invisible man who is shown as a hat without a head (Figures 10 and 11). In this comics vignette, Memory becomes an allegorical figure, a yet-to-emerge “invisible art” (McCloud, 1993) who haunts the comics artist as a young man, striving to create his famous memoir, Maus. 628 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 10. Art Spiegelman, Breakdowns, 2008, p. 9. Figure 11. Art Spiegelman, Breakdowns, 2008, p. 10. Depicted as a hard-boiled Dick Tracy, “Memory” mocks the cry-baby Spiegelman in his search for origins and, indeed, for originality. The action of this vignette moves through thought bubbles that capture the sneering impressions of the detective who follows the artist around, as he is “ducking from one memory to another trying to locate the moments that shaped and misshaped him” all the way back to the inchoate cries of infancy (2008, pp. 10–11). The detective’s thoughts mock the artist’s memory quest, while tormenting him with speech that shows contempt for such “navel gazing.” Spiegelman captures the interaction of both thought and speech in memory’s bubble, in a manner reminiscent of Sina Grace’s more self-conscious Vera J. Camden 629 parallel columns. The cynical memory detective who stalks Art’s every move warns him that both he and the planet are “running out of time.” Art’s response is reported by the memory detective for whom snatches of speech stick in the thought bubble. “‘Time’, he sighed, ‘Comics are time, time turned into space!’” The detective then reports, “I kicked him in the navel, and faded back into the shadows” (2008, p. 11). Spiegelman’s dependence on the thought bubble to achieve his complex, and yet entertaining sojourn into his self-portrait of the artist as a baby provides proof positive that independent comics artists do not allow their creativity to be dictated by corporate measures of cool. What is important here to consider, however, is that the absence of the thought bubble does indeed threaten to create a memory hole in the very form of comics.20 Despite the edicts of numerous mainstream comics editors pushing down this comic tool, the thought bubble persists as an access point to the interior lives of the character, regardless of fashion trends. Perhaps it is not “cool” as some comics have tried to become, but Roz Chast captures the strength of the thought bubble as a tool in her appropriately titled cartoon, “Inside-of-Body Experience” (2018). Her frazzled character thinks to herself, “Once again here I am” (Figure 12). The title inverts the oft used description for an overwhelming experience that left a person feeling “out of body.” As usual, Chast succeeds at capturing everyday experiences that wear us down. By placing this feeling in a thought bubble, Chast captures the absurdity and the almost unspeakability of waking up once again to overwhelming feelings. But it is the comedic nature of this comic that also points to the thought bubble as a mechanism for coping, a sign of resiliency. It is the inner thought, the selfcoaching that allows Chast’s character to acknowledge herself as once again “here.” The thought bubble serves an emblem of the self that processes the world, inside as well as outside. An internal site, the thought bubble is also something the person can inhabit and render through language. The cartoonist Riad Sattouf (2015) also captures, in his way, the power of the thought bubble as a pre-linguistic tool in his memoir, Arab of the Future.21 The ways that Sattouf depicts the inner life of his younger self partakes of a political trauma, 630 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 12. Roz Chast, “Inside of Body Experience,” New Yorker, 2018. while at the same time captures a psychological dimension of familial trauma in the midst of cruelty and chaos as the young boy Riad is displaced into an alien and dangerous landscape. We witness his three-year-old appetite and his innocence captured in a thought bubble (Figure 13). His desire is preverbal and so the thought—the image of cake—is rendered amidst the mother’s despair over the world her child is now inhabiting. The thought bubble says more than mere text can say: the child remains a child and his thoughts remain basic and appetitive. The corporeality of internal life, both figurative and physical, as a child desiring cake, is here paralleled alongside a world of this family that is falling apart. Libyan society is fragmenting around them, and yet the child’s perceptions remain available through comics depiction, drawn from this ruin, and drawn upon the page. Comics seek access to a “nonlinguistic, pre- Vera J. Camden 631 Figure 13. Riad Sattouf, Arab of the Future, 2015, p. 4. symbolic referentiality through the concretization of symbolic meaning” (Singer, 2012, p. 17). For Riad Sattouf, the thought bubble represents a pre-verbal sense of the self and the mind, a feeling state that is in counterpoint to the adult narrator’s boxes: the child’s thought is free, and in some ways, more raw, and more powerful. The thought bubble captures not only the desire of the child, but by virtue of the larger narrative also anticipates the reflections of the adult.22 In a recent series of panels in the PMLA, Alison Bechdel (2019) draws upon the thought bubble to reflect upon her similar appetitive desire (Figure 14). The use of the thought bubble here serves as both a resolution to the questions she asks in the panels, but also a form of resistance to the structure of comics that has moved to eliminate spontaneous thought. Her use of the thought bubble to depict one of the most basic of desires, not far from that of the childish Sattouf, points to the power of this grammatical tool as an access point. She reveals that she may indeed have other thoughts about the subject matter. Bechdel’s use of the thought bubble here returns us to Sattouf as the thought bubble does not solely exist within the realm of cognition but rather captures the affective ranges of desire, and in fact thrives when used to identify such an early desire as hunger. Here the thought bubble is a pause on the page that overlays the middle-aged Bechdel and the child Sattouf, pointing to the bubble as an access to not only 632 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes Figure 14. Alison Bechdel, “Why Comics? A Question,” 2019, p. 571. internal life but also that which falls outside of the strictures of language. Bechdel aspires in a critical and academic forum to explain but also preserve comics as an hybrid domain that challenges the viewer in direct and visceral ways to reckon with interiority. She does not navigate away from thoughts, feelings, and fantasies. Inside Out Nick Sousanis’ recent PMLA graphic essay “Frames of Thought” (2018) depicts, through comics, a new way of conveying knowledge: he relies on the use of the thought bubble to capture not only the idea of thought as emerging from within but also the process of drawing as a mode of discovering our thoughts themselves (Figure 15), through creativity. In doing so he surely provides a map not only to discover “who we’ve been and who we will become” but also reaffirms with a peculiar theoretical elegance the centrality, the place and the power of the thought bubble along the way. Sousanis’ panels in the Vera J. Camden Figure 15. Nick Sousanis, “Frames of Thought,” 2018, p. 128. 633 634 The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes PMLA offer a concluding contribution to this consideration of the place of the thought bubble in comics creation because he both allows for its literal centrality to his dramatization of the process and the art of creating comics as well as creating human meaning. This process draws a trace from inside out: “Beginning in motion/Drawing preserves a trace of something internal externally.” Sousanis uniquely draws us into the process of creating the thought bubble itself as he offers us the hand of the cartoonist to provide the mediation between inside and out. The motion evolves from a kind of milky way of particles to a line that becomes a flow of impulse between inside and out, now bridged by the construction of the thought bubble, made to contain the thoughts of Auguste Rodin’s, “The Thinker” himself. Though diminutive in the drawing, he is the representative of the comic character who posits the fundamental question of the origin of thought itself. And while the creative hand of the cartoonist looms over the page centering this existential conundrum, several narrative boxes seem to speak for Sousanis himself who has designed another comic challenge: “Can we [. . .] recognize [art]as a fundamental strand to what made and makes us human, not an afterthought or alternative, but integral?” Sousanis makes a plea for the place of art in society as integral to our health and humanity, even as he re-centers thought at the core of comics. Thus, by putting thought back on the inside of comics, we aspire to remain attuned to the inner lives of ourselves and others. Notes 1. 2. 3. See Ben Saunders discussion of Spider-Man, whose anxiety motivated his heroism (2011, pp. 72–103). The thought bubble was the perfect device to capture the conflicts of this new character. I am indebted to Valentino Zullo for his inspiration and expertise on the vicissitudes of the thought bubble in comics history. Of course, there have been other uses of thought bubble, including writers utilizing this grammatical tool of comics to “tell” rather than “show” the reader what was happening in the art as the character narrated the event, creating some redundancy. This might happen, for example, in the Spider-Man image above because the comic was likely created using the “Marvel Method” where the writer would provide a brief outline that the artist would then draw followed by the writer using thought bubbles and speech balloons to tell the story. See Yockey (2017, pp. 15–17). Vera J. Camden 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14 15. 16. 635 The language of psychoanalysis that pervaded popular U.S. culture after the Second World War provided comics creators with a vocabulary to describe the terrors of the mind, a new arena after the establishment of the Comics Code Authority (Zullo, 2020, pp. 77–118). What Green points to here is a plenitude of options for the comics artist. He does not privilege the thought bubble over any other grammatical tool of comics, but rather recognizes that its special access to his inner conflicts. See, for instance, Bollas’ chapter on “New Forms of Thinking” in Meaning and Melancholia (2018, pp. 58–65). Comics pioneer Will Eisner has called the format of the speech balloon a “desperation device” that struggles to capture sound in a soundless medium (Eisner, 1985, p. 26). Thierry Smolderen identifies the birth of the speech balloon in the Yellow Kid (2014, p. 143). Others have located the art of speech in a balloon as having emerged in the medieval or early modern period, see Ezell (2018) and Kunzle (1973). In a roundtable (Starkings, 2005) published on the blog “Balloon Tales,” comics veterans including John Ostrander, Kurt Busiek and others discuss the erasure of the thought bubble in contemporary comics. Ostrander remarks, “I once had an editor who told me I couldn’t use thought balloons because they didn’t have them in movies. […] Then the defense was that I couldn’t use them because some writers—not me, of course—used them badly. So, any technique that is used badly can no longer be used? The editor just stopped listening.” Busiek also notes, “Eschewing thought balloons as a creative choice can result in interesting approaches. Eschewing them as a blanket formula, though, is just dumb.” Later in the roundtable Busiek states, “I was also told that the EIC and publisher [at Marvel] hated them and looked adversely on creators that used them.” Pizzino describes how “through autoclasm, creators picture the disenfranchisement that, to one degree or another, comes with the very act of making comics. Against the mainstream narrative, in which at least some graphic novelists can transcend the stigma of immaturity and vulgarity attached to comics, autoclasm testifies to a struggle with problems of status that binds creators across many genres and production models” (2016, p. 5). For a discussion of the turn to being “cool,” as a refusal and denigration of intimacy, see Fraiman (2003) and Camden (2007). In Making Comics, McCloud uses the thought bubble in his section “Inner Life” to show the desire of the four famous figures from The Wizard of Oz. He states, “We can add to a character’s personality all we want—make them kind-hearted or witty or sentimental or neurotic—it’s only when they start to want something that those traits are set in motion and given purpose” (2011, p. 67). In order to show the inner life of these characters he gives them each a thought bubble with their desire: a brain, a heart, courage, and, of course, home. Neil Cohn refers to the thought bubble as one expression of “private carriers” (2013, p. 36) in comics—the surface representations language in comics that are not accessible to others in the comic. He employs “Theory of Mind” to describe how thought bubbles “recognize the existence of mental states in other people. We know that other people have thoughts, and we interact with them on the basis of that knowledge” (2013, pp. 109–110). Pizinno regrets current trends that repudiate the childish appeal of comics: “There is something immature about the obsession with maturity and something sophisticated about deliberate recourse to the seemingly juvenile” (Pizzino, 2016, p. 51). For this history, see the Introduction to this issue, “Comics on the Couch.” Kristeva corrects Freudian phallocentrism. First clinically analyzed in Judith Kestenberg’s essay on the “Inner Genital Sensations,” (1982) it is now virtually commonplace to acknowledge the neglect of the female genital famously inflicted on generations of analysands by Freud’s doctrines of phallic primacy and 636 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. The Thought Bubble and Its Vicissitudes the fantasy of a one-sex model of desire. The founding Freudian fathers’ fear of the feminine and, more generally, male envy of female reproductive organs has generated feminist counter-narratives of inner space and fecundity (Olfman, 1994). See also Camden (2016). To be sure, the diegetic box creates a window into the heart, mind and soul of the characters, bearing a relation to Jane Austen’s innovative uses of “free indirect discourse” (Flavin, 1987). On Wertham and his complex relationship to comics, psychoanalysis, and the development of American democracy in the twentieth century, see Beaty (2005), Mendes (2015), Zullo (2020). Freud describes this psychological pattern of acting out the trauma rather than remembering it in his essay, “Remembering, Repeating and Working Through” (1958 [1914]). An internet search of thought bubbles (or thought balloons) leads to countless forums on the loss of this piece of comics architecture. Pages appear on Reddit, and others, including “Quarter to Three” or “Comic Vine.” Brian Raghoobur (2009) writes a blog in defense of the thought bubble on “Den of Geek.” There is also a popular convention in the UK every year simply called “Thought Bubble” (Kennedy, 2017). Such is the resistance and refusal to ignore this icon of comics. In a chapter entitled “The Language of Comics,” Darren Hudson Hick (2012, p. 141, note 13) refers to the ways that in series like Peanuts or Garfield, the distinction between thought and speech is eroded as the animals here use thought bubbles that humans do not understand. His point furthers the idea that the thought bubble captures something pre-verbal or non-verbal; it is an access point to a world before and outside of language. This is not an elision of thought and speech when the animals think in bubbles but rather an acknowledgment of the parts of thought that do not reach speech. Regarding comics capacity to render time in space and thereby capture layers of memory, Jared Gardner notes that comics emerged in the early part of the twentieth century in response to “[t]he need for a new graphical language to describe the present in relation to the past is arguably more pressing than ever” (2012, p. 178). 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