In anticipation of upcoming Beck Series visiting writer and graphic memoirist Mira Jacob, who will join the campus community for a series of events and classroom visits on Wednesday, March 25, and Thursday, March 26, students in Professor Ron Abram鈥檚 鈥淐ontemporary Comics鈥 class and Professor Amy Butcher鈥檚 鈥淪tudies in Literature: The Literary Memoir鈥 quite literally rolled up their sleeves.

Over the span of two class periods, students combined their love of comics and literature to design collaborative, single-panel graphic memoirs on blue line boards, using photographs taken with their classmates. After brief introductions to comics and the literary memoir designed to bring the alternate class up to speed, students were assigned a partner from the opposing class and challenged with responding 鈥 via a visual medium 鈥 to one of a series of prompts that asked them to explore life 最新萝莉社 in a way that extended beyond classes and responsibilities, revealed a personal burden and how it is perceived 鈥 or not perceived 鈥 by others, or explored the hidden thoughts that commonly lurk beneath every day interactions. Above all, students were encouraged to pursue honesty, reflection, and creative risk-taking.

鈥淣ow in its 24th year as a class 最新萝莉社, Contemporary Comics was a natural fit to collaborate with Professor Butcher鈥檚 Literary Memoir class,鈥 explained Abram. 鈥淢y class, like Amy鈥檚, allows students to realize the potential of their own life stories, relationships, and perspectives on the world as opportunities to create sincere and meaningful art. Comics students are writing, drawing, and designing their own memoirs in the form of comics all semester long, so what a great nexus having Mira Jacob鈥檚 upcoming Denison visit bring students together in a truly collaborative spirit.鈥

鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 be luckier in our inaugural offering to benefit from myriad opportunities to explore the memoir here on campus,鈥 Butcher reported. 鈥淭his is my first time offering ENGL 310 Studies in Literature: The Literary Memoir, and so far my students have been able to study and produce audio memoirs as part of the Journalism Program鈥檚 8th Annual Podcast-a-Thon 鈥 where one of my students, Margaret Held 鈥27, was named a finalist for her exceptional audio memoir, Playing Hooky 鈥 and now we鈥檙e fortunate enough to collaborate with Professor Abram鈥檚 class to create dynamic graphic memoirs in anticipation of Mira Jacob鈥檚 visit. We鈥檙e doing things a little backwards 鈥 that is, we鈥檒l circle around to focus on book-length literary memoirs in the second half of the semester 鈥 but I鈥檓 so thrilled with what we鈥檝e been able to do as a result of Denison鈥檚 robust programming.鈥

As part of the graphic memoir assignment, students in both classes were encouraged to draft scripts authentic to their lives and lived experiences and to include both internal monologue (thought bubbles) and dialogue (speech balloons), in addition to making stylistic and artistic choices complementary to the medium. While the assignment relied primarily on photographs taken with their classmates, students were also supplied with all the tools and materials necessary to design, build, and collage a small comic sliver of their lives, including specialty comic pens, printed text, and collage materials, which served as the visual backdrop to their comics. In addition to submitting their graphic memoirs to their corresponding faculty for a grade, students鈥 graphic memoirs will be published as part of a joint anthology and exhibited in the Denison Museum from Monday, April 6, through Friday, April 17, as part of Professor Butcher鈥檚 special exhibit on memoir.

鈥淎ll of this work is to set the stage for Mira Jacob鈥檚 visit,鈥 Professor Butcher explained. 鈥Good Talk is an incredible testament to what the visual medium makes possible for emerging memoirists, and Jacob鈥檚 own admission of her relative newness to illustration upon conception of the book should serve as an inspiration to anyone curious about what can happen through the marriage of visuals and text.鈥

Jacob, whose visit is generously cosponsored by the Beck Series, the Laura C. Harris Program, and the Denison Museum, will offer a reading and discussion of her graphic memoir to the campus community at 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, March 25, at the Denison Museum. The following afternoon, she鈥檒l lead a generative graphic workshop, entitled 鈥淒rawing Conversations,鈥 from noon to 1 p.m. in the Denison Museum classroom. Both events are free and open to the public, though participants are encouraged to sign up in advance for the workshop, which promises to help participants 鈥渄ive deep into the joys and hazards of talking to other humans,鈥 鈥渓ocate conversations that stick,鈥 and 鈥渄raw them into life.鈥 No illustration experience is necessary, Jacob promises, though 鈥渆xperience cringing is a plus.鈥 Those unfamiliar with Jacob鈥檚 work can enjoy a specially curated Good Talk exhibit by two of the Denison Museum鈥檚 interns, who were granted exclusive access by Jacob to the book鈥檚 high-res illustrations.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a great project for them,鈥 explained Denison Museum Director Megan Hancock. 鈥淭hey are so excited to curate this exhibit.鈥

Good Talk: A Memoir in Conversations, Jacob鈥檚 most recent book, is a graphic memoir designed around illustrated conversations with her young biracial (half-Indian, half-Jewish) son, whose questions about his identity 鈥 his race, his family, and his country 鈥 grew increasingly difficult for Jacob to answer. By employing a unique mix of drawings, photos, and text to recount her answers 鈥 and the internal inquiry they required 鈥 Jacob rebuilds formative conversations from her childhood past and ongoing present, ultimately illustrating abstract concepts that include racism, love, and what it means to be a person of color in the United States in ways that rely heavily on both vulnerability and humor.

鈥淚 want you to understand what it is like to be a [person of color] in America,鈥 Jacob wrote upon the book鈥檚 publication, 鈥渁nd how many different messages you are given every day, and how many different things people will tell you about yourself at any given moment, and how many people feel the right to claim your time, and your mind, and your body, for whatever purpose they have in mind.鈥

In addition to an array of starred reviews and praise, the book was shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award, longlisted for the PEN Open Book Award, named a New York Times Notable Book, and named a best book of the year by Time, Esquire, Publishers Weekly, and Library Journal. Her forthcoming novel, We Killed Anji Alexander, about the murder of a white-passing Indian actress, will be released in 2027 with Ecco Books.

As the final event of her campus visit, Jacob will meet with Professor Abram and Butcher鈥檚 students, who will reconvene in the Denison Museum on Thursday, March 26, for a special combined classroom visit to discuss with Jacob their experience of reading Good Talk and creating their first graphic memoir.

鈥淚鈥檓 excited for her to see what they鈥檝e built, using her book as inspiration,鈥 explained Butcher. 鈥淎nd yes, suffice it to say, I鈥檓 eager for the many 鈥榞ood talks鈥 that will ensue.鈥

March 12, 2026