Your cart is empty.
Body, Soul, and Comics - Graphic Religion and Graphic Medicine

Body, Soul, and Comics

Graphic Religion and Graphic Medicine

By A. David Lewis
Hardcover : 9781496862266, 144 pages, 47 b&w illustrations, May 2026
Paperback : 9781496862273, 144 pages, 47 b&w illustrations, May 2026
Expected to ship: 2026-05-15
Expected to ship: 2026-05-15

Table of contents

Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: Islam, Comic Books, and the Aniconism Fallacy
Chapter 2: Jewish Comics and the Krypton Hypothesis
Chapter 3: Superman Graveside: Superhero Salvation Beyond Jesus
Chapter 4: What’s Next for Muslim Superheroes?
Chapter 5: Fictoscripture and the Wormhole Sacred
Chapter 6: Building Toward Graphic Medicine
Chapter 7: A Graphic-Medicine Prescription
Chapter 8: Comics as a Dysoncological Medium
Chapter 9: Enpaneled Being, Being Enpaneled
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Credits
Index

An exploration of how comics illuminate medicine, religion, and identity

Description

Body, Soul, and Comics: Graphic Religion and Graphic Medicine follows A. David Lewis’s unique scholarly journey through graphic religion and graphic medicine, exploring how comics intersect with healthcare, clinical practice, spirituality, patient experience, and belief. Drawing on more than two decades of academic research, Lewis reframes both fields through the distinct narrative and visual language of comics.

Though often seen as opposites—spiritual versus scientific—religion and medicine share concerns with selfhood, community, personal well-being, and transformation. Through comics, Lewis reveals these shared concerns and examines how selfhood, identity, and embodiment emerge through visual storytelling.

Blending scholarship with autobiography, Lewis weaves personal moments—a religious conversion, experiences with anxiety, and academic work within a healthcare setting—into a broader analysis of representation and meaning in comic books. His account resists the traditional divide between theory and lived experience, grounding abstract ideas in the personal and the visual.

Body, Soul, and Comics is both a call for disciplinary reunification and a meditation on how comics themselves bridge seemingly disparate realms—text and image, body and spirit, illness and meaning.