Articles from and news about the premier and longest-running academic journal devoted to all aspects of cartooning and comics -- the International Journal of Comic Art (ISSN 1531-6793) published and edited by John Lent.

Showing posts with label CT Lim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CT Lim. Show all posts

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Remembering John Lent, part 7: John Lent's Pioneering Contributions to SEA Comics Studies by ct lim

by ct lim  

When I first met John Lent in 1992 in Singapore, he told me a story. How he decided to do his postgraduate studies to escape the draft. “is that the Vietnam War, John?” “No, but it was after the Korean War.” 


In 1992, John was 56 years old. I was 20 years old. This year, I will only be 54 years old. And John is still older than me now when I first met him!


Many tributes have poured in since the news of John’s passing broke. If you have read them, you would come to a conclusion (and there could be many conclusions or beginnings for a life as rich as John’s) that Asia and the Third World were his focus and, in many ways, his method. 


A  search will turn up many articles, chapters and books he wrote and edited about Asian mass communications, press freedom, cinema, animation, cartoons, comic strips and comics. Narrowing that and you have specific regions and countries like East Asia, South Asia, North Asia and where I am from, Southeast Asia. 


A sampling: https://independent.academia.edu/JOHNLENT


Many of his earlier books on comics and cartoons (published in the 1990s) were on Asia in general. But his connections with Southeast Asia went back to his early years of university teaching in the 1970s. Having taught in the Philippines and Malaysia, he wrote critically about the mass communications and press freedom in these countries and also Singapore. He described the mass media in these countries as ‘development journalism’, which meant “government say so” journalism, resulting in authoritarian media policies. This incurred the wrath of the Singapore government in the 1970s and John was labelled as one of those troublemaker academics from overseas who sniped from a safe distance and far from the borders of Singapore. John was named in the Singapore newspapers, which if you think about it, it’s ironic. They sort of proved John’s point about development journalism. 


Thus, he told me he was afraid he would not be able to come through the Singapore customs in 1992, when we met. That was the year he did his Southeast Asian trip to countries like Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines to meet artists, editors and publishers. This was also around the time he met Lat and Muliyadi Mahamood of Malaysia, I found out later. Lat shared that John invited him to many places, conferences and events; Muliyadi said John has helped him a lot academically.


From this 1992 tour, John wrote many articles about Southeast Asian cartoons and comic strips that appeared in various journals. He interviewed me and I interviewed him for BigO. But we got something more from him too. I introduced him to Michael Cheah, the editor / publisher of BigO and Mike was interested to meet John because Mike used to be a reporter for the Singapore Monitor and he has read John’s stuff before. Long story short, we got John to write about Asian and SEA comics for BigO. Mike passed away from heart problems a few years ago. 


The 1990s, in my mind, was the start of a number of dedicated volumes that John put out on Southeast Asian comics and cartoons. He has been editing Berita, a periodical on Malaysia/Singapore/Brunei studies, but one of the first specialized edited volumes on Southeast Asian cartooning appeared in Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science Volume 25, Number 1 (1997). I contributed an article on ’Singapore Political Cartooning’, which was based on the history honors dissertation I wrote just the year before. Enough has been said about John giving young aspiring scholars their first chance. But I didn’t become an academic, I became a history teacher instead. I would repeat this joke to Ian Gordon after a few drinks. If I had done my honors dissertation on the history of Singapore cinema or music, I would have more of an academic career. Whether I succeed or fail in that field is a different story. But I focused on comics, and since the late 1990s, I was just known as the guy who wrote about comics, the ‘cartoon guy’ who was not to be taken seriously by the academic elite in Singapore universities. I should have written for Asian Cinema (also started and edited by John at one point) instead of the International Journal of Comic Art. Maybe I should blame John for this. But a friendship of 34 years? Nah, I would not trade anything for that. 


An example of that friendship was when I was asked to put together a special issue on SEA comics for SPAFA (SEAMEO Regional Centre for Archaeology and Fine Arts) journal in 2007 and when I approached John, he gamely wrote the lead article


Two other SEA volumes followed in the 2000s and John has always made a point to include me - Southeast Asian Cartoon Art: History, Trends and Problems and Transnationalism in East and Southeast Asian Comics Art. The former’s chapter on Singapore Chinese cartoons was based on my master’s thesis and the latter was the result of a symposium John put together with Benjamin Ng and Wendy Wong at the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2018. On specific SEA countries, John wrote The First One Hundred Years of Philippine Komiks and Cartoons, which was an extension of an article he wrote in Comic Book Artist Vol 2 No 4 (2004). The book is still much referred to today. 


A preview of the Comic Book Artist article is here: https://issuu.com/twomorrows/docs/cbav2-4preview/18


But an older but more complete article on the Philippines is here: https://archium.ateneo.edu/phstudies/vol46/iss2/5/


(it is not a coincidence that when Ian Gordon and I decided to meet on the evening of 18 May in Singapore to drink a toast to John, we gravitated to a Philippines pub) 


Of course, one should not forget the post retirement (John retired from Temple University in 2011) monumental volumes of the 2010s to present - the University of Mississippi Press’ Asian Comics, Comics Art in China, Asian Political Cartoons and Comics Art in Korea. One more on the Caribbean is akan datang (coming soon). 


I did not always agree with John. But I think he would not want it any other way. The last time I saw him in 2018 in Hong Kong, I jokingly said what he was doing (traveling all over the world) was not great for his carbon footprint. Of course, it was great he was still up and about, lots of energy and flying all over and giving us a chance to meet him. But I was worried that all that flying was not good for his health. I would rather fly to America to see him if I could. Still, whenever I hear he is in the vicinity, I would fly to meet him, like in 2016 when I flew to Kuala Lumpur over the weekend. We just hung out for 2 days and it was a good trip. We met up with Muliyadi and we went to interview Nora Abdullah, a pioneer female Malay artist who drew comics in the 1950s. The interview appeared in the International Journal of Comic Art (where else?). Nora has since passed. 


My main disagreement with John is his approach. It is great that he would sweep in into any place and quickly suss out the cartoonists, the artists, the editors, the publishers, the translators and even the fixers. Of course, all these required weeks or months of prep beforehand to set up the meetings. But John’s time in these places were short and he interviewed whoever he could find, and visited offices and studios in a matter of days, sometimes less than a week. I think he would admit there is a flaw or very clear limitations of such a parachute method. You are on a SWAT / commando / SAS mission, to the dirty and get in and out when the job is done. John would maintain contact with those he met, but whatever he saw, heard, read or bought would be a snapshot of that place’s comics at that particular point in time. You can only generalize to a very limited extent. But perhaps due to his training in the social sciences (mass communications), John leans towards making generalizations. He would also conflate the information from his interviews. For example, he would interview an artist in the 1990s and later in the 2010s. He would put the quotes from the two interviews together, and it reads like it is from a recent interview conducted. You will only know if you read the endnotes or if you have read John’s earlier articles which used the same quotes. This is not an idle criticism of John’s work, but it is coming from a place that has looked at John’s writing critically and engaging and thinking about it to improve the field of comics studies. Or at least comics studies in SEA. 


Nothing changes the fact that what John did was very important because often he was the first to document the cartoon or comic scene of that particular. He would welcome other writers and scholars to continue the work and he would generously share his contacts. I have asked him several times for leads when I visit a new place. No questions asked. John was in the business of knowledge sharing and creation. This generosity cannot be overstated. 


In many ways, my response to John’s approach and trips was to extend and expand beyond what he had done. I have visited Indonesia many times, different cities, met many artists, some repeat visits, some are my good friends of over 15 years. And the first thing I will say is there is no such thing as Indonesian comics. There are comics from Jakarta, Bandung, Surabaya, Malang, Semarang, Solo, Jogjakarta and there are all different with some similarities, but the context and the market are different. And these are the cities in Java. (West, Central and East) There are also comics from Sumatra like Medan and so on. And when I described the comics from say, Bali (an island on its own), it is my impression of comics Bali at that particular point in time. Someone visiting Bali at a different time could have a very different experience and view of the comics. 


On a few occasions, when I disagreed with some things which were published in IJOCA, John would encourage me to write a letter and he would publish it. It did not matter if the article in contention was written by him or not. He wanted that exchange and discourse. Tell me I am wrong and I will stand corrected. 


There is probably more I can say but it has taken me a week to write this. Like how I met Fusami Ogi in 2000 through John when he put together a comics panel at IAMCR in Singapore and both of us presented. I would meet Fusami again in 2002 in Toronto at PCA, again under the aegis of John. I would be involved with the projects of Fusami and her group of women manga profs and Japan has shown much more interest in SEA comics than North American or European comics scholars. 


Except John Lent.  

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Book Review: Chronicles of a Circuit Breaker by Joseph Chiang

Chronicles of a Circuit Breaker, Joseph Chiang, Singapore: Epigram Books, 2021. https://epigrambookshop.sg/products/chronicles-of-a-circuit-breaker

reviewed by Mike Rhode

The burgeoning genre of what’s being called graphic medicine started decades ago with earnest PSA giveaway comic books on the dangers of smoking or animated military films warning about diseases such as syphilis and malaria. By 1994, Harvey Pekar and Joyce Brabner’s Our Cancer Year (illustrated by Frank Stack) set the pattern for the autobiographical account of personal suffering from disease which remains the dominant type of story. 2020 saw the genre increased by a wealth of comics in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. One of the lighter additions to these volumes is Chiang’s book collecting his webcomic, which unfortunately and undeservedly might be hard to get by most of our readers, only due to the ridiculous cost of international shipping. The production values and the care that went into it, with some strips redrawn four times and excellent computer coloring mean that the physical book is a pleasure to have. Chiang and Lim provided a copy to me for this review, but the webcomic is readable for free at https://www.josephdraws.com.

Chiang has collected his webcomic about Singapore’s struggle against COVID-19, and the government’s attempt to break the transmission of the disease via a pause in public life – a circuit breaker – from May through June 2020. “When the Circuit Breaker started, there was nothing to do for artists, which are the most non-essential workers, with no jobs, at that time I started a journal to record to the day-to-day happenings,” Chiang said in an interview with his editor CT Lim (who’s also country editor for IJOCA). His journal was written words but he would add in sketches and when the National Arts Council initiated a special COVID fund, he applied for a small grant for a digital project. While normally a print maker, he decided to turn his journal into a graphic novel, returning to the comics format he’d left about a decade ago. Due to the grant’s conditions, the comic would need to be a webcomic. Since every day was much the same, with everyone unable to leave the house, he decided to do a humorous strip. It was semi-autobiographical, not 100% true, but based on his family and what he saw on the news. “Putting myself in as a character, solved the problem of people possibly accusing me of laughing at other’s misfortunes.” 

 

 

His first attempt foundered when he attempted to adapted his journal directly because a straight depiction of his daily life quickly grew dull. Working with Lim, the strip’s look and content gradually evolved to humorous stacked panels, which could eventually be collected in a book, and also displayed in an exhibit. But at the beginning, he mostly wanted to draw a webcomic that he collected as a pdf and submitted it in fulfillment of his grant. The initial project took three months, but for a book, he needed to double the amount of strips, and he didn’t think he could force himself to do more. The end of the book as a result is a post-circuit breaker follow-up and some single-panel ‘lessons’ that Chiang learned.

The book is laid out by day – a prelude introduces the government’s plan and his wife’s immediate hoarding of toilet paper, and his family’s reaction to bonding – by looking at their cell phones just as they had been earlier, day 1 shows his daughter getting tired of her parents ignoring their morning alarm, and deciding to wake them with her saxophone, day 3 is his decision to launch a comic strip about his family (and his favorite page of the book). By day 10, he shows himself being winded by the exercise of running around his couch three times; on day 17 Chiang shows his mask snapping and his running and hiding in a toilet; on day 33, he draws a very traditional gag cartoon of playing Scrabble with his family and getting “covid” as a word; and by day 53, he’s got a suntan except for his mouth where his mask has covered it.


Chiang’s simple, clear cartooning, influenced by American indy cartoonists and traditional comic strips (and colored with faux Benday dots to reinforce that), is a both a serious recounting of some of the issues of isolation and over-familiarity brought about by quarantine enforcement and the fear of a communicable disease with no cure and unclear etiology, as well as an enjoyable light family comic strip. I would definitely recommend this volume to those interested in the genre.  An interview by Lim with Chiang, with a discussion of the cartoons and a look at the exhibit of them, can be seen on Facebook at <https://www.facebook.com/109354309101740/videos/312307143951724>

 A version of this review will appear in print in issue 23:2. Epigram publishes other graphic medicine books including White Coat Tales about attending medical school in Singapore, and The Antibiotic Tales by acclaimed cartoonist Sonny Liew. Also available online is James Tan's All Death Matters, about end-of-life care.

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Film Review: "I Am Still Your Child" featuring cartoonist Von Allan

Von Allan
I Am Still Your Child. Megan Durnford (writer/director). CatBird Films, 2018. 45:00. <http://iamstillyourchild.com/>

 
Lim Cheng Tju / CT Lim

As a genre, graphic medicine is on the ascendance and within that genre, comics on mental health are gaining prominence especially given how the recent global covid-19 crisis has affected mental wellbeing. Recently I moderated a panel on comics and mental health, featuring Singapore artists, Sonny Liew, James Tan, Anngee Neo and Mak Kean Loong.

 I Am Still Your Child, a 45-minute Canadian documentary written and directed by Megan Durnford, was released in 2018, and is a haunting testimony of children who had to take care of their parents who suffered from mental illness. It features three individuals in this situation – Sarah, a high school student; Jessy, an art student who is also in a band; and Von Allan, a comic book artist who self-publishes his own comics. Out of the three, Sarah and Jessy are still taking care of their parents while Von’s mother passed away in the 1990s when he was a young adult.

 While Sarah and Jessy’s stories are very powerful, our focus is on Von. Allan is a Canadian comic artist based in Ottawa. Comics helped him to survive a traumatic childhood. Superhero titles such as The X-Men were an escape for him -- something to keep him sane during the trying times. He struck out on his own at 18, worked in an independent bookstore, and learned to draw comics late in life. His mother passed away at the age of 48 in 1994 and 15 years later, Von’s first graphic novel, The Road To God Knows, was self-published and is a semi-autobiographical tale of a teenager’s relationship with her mentally-ill mother.

 The book led Megan Durnford to contacting Von in 2015 to be in a documentary she was making on individuals like Von -- children who had to take care of their parents who were manic depressive and suffering from bipolar disorder. While Sarah and Jessy were still going through their challenging family situations, Von showed what it is to survive such an experience. And it is reaffirming to see – one can get through this and still learn something valuable from it. As Von shared, “I think that the most positive impacts on my life is that it just gave me more sensitivity."

 Durnford had wanted to use images from the book in the documentary, but Allan was uncomfortable with that as he felt his early work was too rough. As a compromise, he redrew selected pages which was used in the film. On his website, Von shared the process here with a side by side comparison of the 2009 version with the 2017 redrawn pages. <https://www.vonallan.com/2017/09/on-getting-stronger.html>

 Surprisingly, Allan is not the first to tackle such a topic in Canadian comics. Chester Brown also drew about his schizophrenic mother in I Never Liked You (originally serialized as “Fuck” in Yummy Fur in the 1990s).

 I had not read Von Allan’s comics before and watching this documentary has made me curious about his work. Unfortunately The Road To God Knows is out of print, but his newer comics are for sale on his website or on Comixology. Some can be read for free online on his website. <https://www.vonallan.com/p/comics.html>

 You can watch I Am Still Your Child for free if you are in Canada. Or you can buy the DVD from the official website. The film website provided this sobering fact: “More than half a million of Canada’s frontline mental healthcare “workers” are less than twelve years old. They’re called COPMI – Children of a Parent with Mental Illness – and there are 575,000 of them in Canada.” This is an important issue and a documentary definitely worth watching.

 A version of this review will be in print in IJOCA 22:2.