Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)

<p>The article introduces collaborative comic creation (CCC) as a methodological tool. The central question it addresses is how marginalised imaginations of futures can be made visible in the context of the planned Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia-Transport (LAPSSET) in Kenya. The question assum...

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Main Authors: J. T. Aalders, A. Moraa, N. A. Oluoch-Olunya, D. Muli
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Copernicus Publications 2020-12-01
Series:Geographica Helvetica
Online Access:https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/75/415/2020/gh-75-415-2020.pdf
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spelling doaj-b239b37fc88449ea98a46f733d96dde92020-12-07T08:02:22ZdeuCopernicus PublicationsGeographica Helvetica0016-73122194-87982020-12-017541543010.5194/gh-75-415-2020Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)J. T. Aalders0A. Moraa1N. A. Oluoch-Olunya2D. Muli3School of Global Studies, Gothenburg University, Göteborg, 40530, SwedenLAM Sisterhood, Nairobi, 00100, KenyaSunflower Pictures, Nairobi, 00100, Kenyaindependent illustrator: Nairobi, 00100, Kenya<p>The article introduces collaborative comic creation (CCC) as a methodological tool. The central question it addresses is how marginalised imaginations of futures can be made visible in the context of the planned Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia-Transport (LAPSSET) in Kenya. The question assumes that infrastructure projects such as the LAPSSET corridor inscribe not only particular ways of moving into a landscape but also one specific temporality that marginalises other future-making practices. The paper participates in the ongoing debate about how imagined futures and future-making practices can be appreciated and analysed methodologically. It thus contributes to the literature on geographies of the future by drawing together conceptual insights from anthropology, infrastructure studies, and critical cartography. Based on these different approaches, the paper proposes to regard future-making practices not only in relation to contentious timelines but also in terms of lines made by moving and drawing on landscapes and surfaces. Using a review of existing social foresight methods as a basis, we describe the practical implementation of CCC. Subsequently, the analysis of one collaboratively produced comic illustrates how the method can help to visualise ambivalent and uncertain imaginations of different futures that oppose the unitary vision of modernity produced by dominant infrastructural visions of a single future. We conclude by reflecting on possible ways of developing the method further.</p>https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/75/415/2020/gh-75-415-2020.pdf
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. T. Aalders
A. Moraa
N. A. Oluoch-Olunya
D. Muli
spellingShingle J. T. Aalders
A. Moraa
N. A. Oluoch-Olunya
D. Muli
Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)
Geographica Helvetica
author_facet J. T. Aalders
A. Moraa
N. A. Oluoch-Olunya
D. Muli
author_sort J. T. Aalders
title Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)
title_short Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)
title_full Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)
title_fullStr Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)
title_full_unstemmed Drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (CCC)
title_sort drawing together: making marginal futures visible through collaborative comic creation (ccc)
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Geographica Helvetica
issn 0016-7312
2194-8798
publishDate 2020-12-01
description <p>The article introduces collaborative comic creation (CCC) as a methodological tool. The central question it addresses is how marginalised imaginations of futures can be made visible in the context of the planned Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia-Transport (LAPSSET) in Kenya. The question assumes that infrastructure projects such as the LAPSSET corridor inscribe not only particular ways of moving into a landscape but also one specific temporality that marginalises other future-making practices. The paper participates in the ongoing debate about how imagined futures and future-making practices can be appreciated and analysed methodologically. It thus contributes to the literature on geographies of the future by drawing together conceptual insights from anthropology, infrastructure studies, and critical cartography. Based on these different approaches, the paper proposes to regard future-making practices not only in relation to contentious timelines but also in terms of lines made by moving and drawing on landscapes and surfaces. Using a review of existing social foresight methods as a basis, we describe the practical implementation of CCC. Subsequently, the analysis of one collaboratively produced comic illustrates how the method can help to visualise ambivalent and uncertain imaginations of different futures that oppose the unitary vision of modernity produced by dominant infrastructural visions of a single future. We conclude by reflecting on possible ways of developing the method further.</p>
url https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/75/415/2020/gh-75-415-2020.pdf
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