Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Doodle Alley: What's a Comic Essay?

Comic essay. How can the bland word “essay” (sorry, essay fans) exist in the same sentence as the blissful word “comic?” The short answer: Stephen McCranie, cartoonist. The long answer: keep reading.

As a creative, McCranie fulfills all three components in the componential model of creativity. In English: he has what it takes to be creative, which depends on more than just talent alone. According to Amabile, the three key components of creativity are domain-relevant skills, creativity-relevant process, and intrinsic task motivation. Again, what does that mean in English? And what does this have to do with comic essays? Hold on tight, and we’ll find out.

McCranie has done a myriad of projects in the cartooning world, and he began from a humble place. Drawing inspiration from another kid who would doodle comics during church, he started out drawing comics when he was six. As he got older, he eventually graduated with a degree in Fine Arts and became the cartoonist he is today. That’s a part of what Amabile calls domain-relevant skills. McCranie acquired knowledge in his domain of art both formally, through schooling, and informally, through watching others make art.
Early Days

With gathered knowledge under his belt, McCranie went on to make Mal and Chad (kids graphic novel series), Space Boy (sci-fi webcomic), Doodle Alley, and more cool stuff that I’m probably forgetting.
https://malandchad.com
http://www.webtoons.com/en/drama/space-boy/
https://doodlealley.com
But back to Doodle Alley! Doodle Alley is McCranie’s process blog and home to his “comic essays.” Here, he shares what he’s learned as a creative and goes beyond the domain of art by creating “comics that nourish,” or comic essays, in hopes of helping budding creatives find “sustainable creativity.” (Yes, he used all those phrases in quotation marks.)
Is Anybody Listening?
In one of his comic essays, he stresses the importance of setting goals and “reverse engineering.” In essence, that means beginning at the end and setting little goals on how to get there. Well, he phrased it better than I did.
Plan Backwards, Live Forwards
Hard work is a part of what Amabile calls creativity-relevant processes. An orientation towards working hard is key to creativity, and planning is one way to keep at working hard consistently over a long period of time. McCranie has kept at his cartooning projects for a long time (Space Boy debuted on Webtoon on March 5, 2015!). His reverse engineering has been serving him well in regards to working hard!

But why bother working hard? What drives McCranie to create? Sure, cartooning is his job and he has to do his job to make money, but it’s more than that. This something more is what Amabile calls intrinsic task motivation. To understand how McCranie fits into this, let’s start with an old saying: “Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.” Does McCranie agree with this? Not quite!
Who You are Determines What You Do
What McCranie stresses here is the importance of the heart. As cliché as it sounds, he believes that doing what you love is a key part of sustainable creativity and impacting others.
Who You are Determines What You Do
When talking about intrinsic task motivation, Amabile highlights the “intrinsic motivation principle of creativity” which says that “people will be most creative when they are motivated primarily by the interest, enjoyment, satisfaction, and challenge of the work itself (intrinsic motivators).” And that’s what keeps McCranie going.


Now, where were we? Oh, that’s right. Comic essay. McCranie is how the words “comic” and “essay” can exist in the same sentence. And they’re not that boring either! In fact, you’ve just read a few pages of said comic essays. Go you!

Sources:
Amabile, Teresa M. “Beyond Talent: John Irving and the Passionate Craft of Creativity.” American Psychologist, vol. 56, no. 4, Apr. 2001, pp. 333—336.

3 comments:

  1. This was such an interesting post! I love the idea of turning essays into art--it makes them much more entertaining to read, and it seems like a really unique way to channel your writing into something more creative. Also, I really love the comic about the fish proverb. It speaks to me for some reason. Overall, great post!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love this! Comic essays are such a good idea, and it's cool to see how McCranie uses them to express both his art and his thoughts. I also think it's really neat that he manages to keep all of these projects balanced! It shows that he's really just doing this because he loves it, not because he's looking for fame. Definitely an interesting post!

    ReplyDelete
  3. This post was so interesting. I like how McCranie, without realizing it, hits the major points from the Amabile article in his comic essays. I've never seen an essay in comic form before but I think it would be amazing if more people began to follow this example, it would definitely make me a more avid essay reader!

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.