Date of Award
Spring 5-7-2025
Degree Name
Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Illustration & Visual Culture
Degree Type
Thesis
Abstract
This essay explores the dream as a narrative in graphic novels and comics, examining its character as a subconscious experience depicted by means of visual storytelling. Focusing on psychological, symbolic, and aesthetic functions of dream narrative, I demonstrate that dream narration offers an allegory by means of which both creator and reader can explore issues of identity, desire and trauma in an intimate and healing way. In analyzing these functions of dream narration, I draw upon ideas from theorists such as C.J Jung, Freud and other scholars who have engaged their work on the psychological perspective of the experience of dreams; Roland Barthes on the structuralism and Post-Structuralism, semiotic language narration; Scott McCloud and other comic scholars on the visual aesthetic of dreams and history of dream comics. This essay unravels the storytelling of dreams to create a non-linear logic of storytelling, My research engages comics all of which focus on author and reader collaboration, mid-20th-century American golden age comics, to autobiographical graphic novels from Julie Doucet and Una. Ultimately, I seek to show that dream narratives provide a safe space for both artists and readers. I argue that dream narration in comics is not only an artistic exploration of the unconscious but also a collaborative meaning-making that evolves across social context.
Language
English
Program Chair
John Hendrix
Recommended Citation
LI, MUYANG, "The Liminal Space of Dreams: Narration of Dreams in Graphic novel and Comics" (2025). MFA in Illustration & Visual Culture. 40.
https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/mfa_illustration/40