Deeper than your average comic

 

I really enjoyed the flash driven “Brainstrips” by Alan Bigelow because of it’s simplicity and the satirical humor it presents in a comic book format. I have never been a huge fan of comics but I think Bigelow does a great job using the familiar panel interface to answer some of life’s greatest questions.  The answers to the questions of course are not straightforward and are presented in a medium where “logic and pedantry have no play”. The playability came very naturally to this game, was just like flipping through a ’50s comic book except for the reoccurring use of sound which I thought was very effective in putting the user in the scene of the action and at other times was just amusing.

The Science for Idiots section was particularly entertaining for me. Anybody who is flat out ignorant to the world of science should click through this game and learn some facts that will get you some attention at a bar. Have you ever wondered about the logistics of actually digging a hole all the way to China? Then you should definitely check it out.

Science for Idiots delved into some of the politics of scientific advancements. It turns out that keeping chimpanzees in cages the same size of cubicles results in some very familiar side effects. Making a very unusual case for the evolution theory…the attention span difference in young chimps and kids isn’t that far off either.

I think comic book style was an interesting choice to present the serious subjects because it would often make the content seem either very serious or very trivial. The answer is either profound or it is joke. I thought that the particular science factoid about nuclear bombs amusing because of the graphics….and then very intense.  Right off the bat I thought this seemed pretty neat…

 

Question: Would I survive a nuclear bomb in a big city?

 

….and then extremely terrifying..

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Brainstrips” – A Multi-Genre “Knowledge Series”

Brainstrips, by Alan Bigelow, is a “3-part knowledge series” incorporating elements of comics, hypertext, and kinetic poetry (although in this work it would be more accurately described as kinetic prose.) Bigelow mixes different forms of electronic literature to create unique artworks, his multi-form/multi-genre work “American Ghosts” has already been covered on our blog. The first link above sends you to the entire series, the individual parts can be accessed from Bigelow’s website. The three parts: “Deep Philosophical Questions,” “Science for Idiots,” and “Higher Math” take a humorous and irreverent look at philosophy, science, math, and consumer culture.

When accessed from Bigelow’s website the first section, “Deep Philosophical Questions,” a quote from Ambrose Bierce’s Devil’s Dictionary appears above a loading bar. It reads, “Philosophy, n. A route of many roads leading from nowhere to nothing.” This quote sets the stage for the first section, in a Derridean move  Bigelow shows how philosophy is ultimately pointless because it is just a bunch of words that may make logical sense within the context of philosophy itself, but have little effect on changing reality in a meaningful way. Once “Deep Philosophical  Questions” is loaded a screen with comic art and a menu with links to six philosophical inquiries appears. Each of these links lead a different comic strip, which explore the concept at hand, once they are exited they can only be accessed if a new game is started. Sometimes an answer is given, such as in the “What is Art?” lexia, which defines art as “a mathematical equation applied to different experiential contexts” thus making artists (including Bigelow) obsolete. Others end ambiguously and/or absurdly and leave the reader just as puzzled as before, the “Do trees have rights lexia?” focuses on two explorers who want to but mahogany trees from the natives who then attack the explorers. This strip ends with a woman waking up and revealing the whole situation was just a dream. Like dreams, studies in philosophy can yield some interesting thoughts, but if used to strictly interpret the real world can lead to misguided or ridiculous interpretations. ”Is color real?” breaks the fourth wall with two characters commenting on their existence within a comic strip.

Once all the links have been clicked through, a link to a “Special Advertising Section” replaces the questions. This leads to a lexia spoofing advertisements, with the heading “Invent Your Own Philosophy!” Using language and imagery associated with advertising, this page mocks the ideology of consumerism. The abundant choice in consumer goods creates an illusion of choice, where every selection does nothing to change the underlying choice made in every consumer purchase – the choice to perpetuate consumerist structures by purchasing consumer goods. Once the magic button is pressed the words “Thank You!” appear on the screen and then fades to black, mirroring the emptiness of choice within a consumerist context.

“Deep Philosophical Questions” is the most overtly comic part of “Brainstrips.” All the lexia, excluding the main menu and the final advertising section, feature sequential art where time elapses in one space via the separation of that space int different panels. The other two sections “Science for Idiots” and “Higher Math” also start with hypertext menus featuring different links that can only be accessed once per playthrough. Inside these links the reader clicks through different screens by using arrows at the bottom, an act which is a form of animation. In all three parts images and text move on the screen, which I why I would define Bigelow’s work as kinetic prose. The final two sections also contain quizzes featuring absurd questions and equally absurd answers, which the reader can obviously not answer correctly no matter what choice is made. Showing that in the end the search for ultimate knowledge and “Truth” is hopeless as humanity is within a context where concrete answers to many questions just do not exist.

*In this post I have offered a rather bleak view of humanity and symbolic systems, suggesting that humans’ symbolic forms of communication are all ultimately flawed and pointless. This is partially due to Bigelow’s subject matter and my own interests in deconstruction and being hypercritical. However, it should be noted that the very fact that we as humans can think and feel so many things the way we do in unique ways is beautiful and downright awesome even if they ultimately have no point. I’d even say the lack of ultimate truth and meaning is an enormous drive behind human creativity and makes everything humans do all the more beautiful.