Dr. Gemma Sou's latest paper

I co-presented a session with Dr. Gemma Sou at the GA Conference in 2023 which was held at the University of Sheffield.

Our slide deck is here on Slideshare.

Gemma's work is outlined on her website here.

She is currently Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at Monash University in Melbourne / Naarm, Australia. Her work is interdisciplinary and contributes to critical disaster studies

It's worth a short diversion here perhaps, to the meaning of the name of the place where she currently works.

We talked about the power of comics in geography lessons, as some of her work has involved translating her research into graphical form, using artists and local creative people to 'translate' it into a form which can more easily be understood. 

She has published a new paper and is presenting a webinar in February based around the work she has done.

Further details from Gemma. (PDF download from the link)

Researchers are increasingly expected to creatively communicate their research, and comics have become one of the most popular ways to do so. 
However, guidance on translating research into comics is lacking. 

Drawing on my experience translating research on disasters into four comics, I provide a step-by-step guide for researchers wanting to take the leap into creating comics. The guide is designed to support researchers through each stage of the process by focusing on key issues, including, the language and conventions of comics, deciding which findings to communicate, writing the script, choosing and working with an illustrator, participatory scripting, and developing characters. 

The guide draws on disasters, comics, and creative methods literature to explain how and why certain steps and processes are taken. Comics present an opportunity to make research more participatory, to gather new and unexpected data, to create more ethical representations of participants and their contexts, and to release researchers’ creativity. 

The guide uses examples from disaster-focused research, but it is written to invite those researching various topics who are interested in creatively narrativising their work.

I was reminded of this resource also from the Spin Off, on the impacts of climate change: an animated comic produced in New Zealand.

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