Rabbit Race by Valerie Bodell |
A Few Interdisciplinary Thoughts
First of all let me say that panic and confusion are normal. In addition, elements that crop up throughout your interdisciplinary studies that seem crazy and not applicable to your situation will probably turn out to be the valuable tools, advice, or points of view you should keep in mind. Also realize that we’re here to learn. Since we don’t know everything - and some days it feels as if we don’t know much of anything - we’re going to make mistakes, lots of them. That’s normal too.
First of all let me say that panic and confusion are normal. In addition, elements that crop up throughout your interdisciplinary studies that seem crazy and not applicable to your situation will probably turn out to be the valuable tools, advice, or points of view you should keep in mind. Also realize that we’re here to learn. Since we don’t know everything - and some days it feels as if we don’t know much of anything - we’re going to make mistakes, lots of them. That’s normal too.
Another characteristic of interdisciplinary
studies is that everything connects to everything else. Therefore there can be no such thing as
useless knowledge. Now I want to take a
moment to applaud my fellow students who are pursuing high ideals and socially
conscious studies. That recognition out
of the way, I can tell you that my topic is creating a comics
autobiography. Is this a frivolous goal? No. If
your topic interests you, go for it.
You’ll find that it connects to the larger picture of humanity sooner or
later. For example, I learned that comics can help victims address trauma. Further, as I consider identity in our modern,
electronic world, incidents like the Colorado shooting at the Batman movie
strike me as role playing fantasies gone wrong. Can exploring the enduring allure of comics
like the Dark Knight series, and
fantasy in many online role playing games, illuminate how most people separate
electronic realities from physical realities?
Is the Colorado shooting incident about male identity?
.... Valerie Bodell, MALS Student
.... Valerie Bodell, MALS Student
Giraffe, Tree, Lion by Valerie Bodell |
One of the greatest powers of interdisciplinary thinking is that it conditions you to make such connections. Interdisciplinary scholarship celebrates knowledge and recognizes the value in all forms of creativity, not just for their own sake but as tools to help us better understand both the natural world and the human experience. I encourage you to embrace your MALS journey and always to look for ways that your interests fit into to the big picture.
Valerie, I really felt like I was in class. You ended with several questions that you didn't answer for us. Beautiful artwork.
ReplyDelete