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Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement

Merryn Thomas, Laura Sorvala, Aelwyn Williams, Aled Singleton Orcid Logo, Carol Maddock Orcid Logo, Deborah Morgan Orcid Logo, Tavi Murray Orcid Logo, Charles Musselwhite Orcid Logo, Merryn Thomas Orcid Logo

Journal of Global Ageing, Pages: 1 - 19

Swansea University Authors: Merryn Thomas, Aelwyn Williams, Aled Singleton Orcid Logo, Carol Maddock Orcid Logo, Deborah Morgan Orcid Logo, Tavi Murray Orcid Logo

Abstract

The places where people live, work and spend leisure time are essential to their health and wellbeing. However, with climate change, these environments are changing. It is paramount that we understand older and younger people’s climate change perspectives, behaviours and visions for the future so th...

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Published in: Journal of Global Ageing
ISSN: 2976-7202
Published: Bristol University Press 2024
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa67620
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However, with climate change, these environments are changing. It is paramount that we understand older and younger people’s climate change perspectives, behaviours and visions for the future so that the places that matter to them can be shaped and managed effectively for health, wellbeing and sustainability.This article presents the case for using comic books to explore climate change with diverse intergenerational groups. The bilingual (Welsh/English) Climate Comic was created in South Wales, UK, as part of the ‘Understanding Older and Younger People’s PerspecTives and Imaginaries of Climate Change’ (OPTIC) project. From February to May 2023, 65 older and younger people took part in structured workshops where we used creative methods (games, collaging, comic creation, mobile and online interviews, storyboarding) to elicit intergenerational conversation, articulate intangible values and explore change. Workshops were audio-recorded, and stories were developed into a comic by illustrator Laura Sorvala. We also used comics as part of wider engagement and to stimulate ideas in a design sprint with interested groups.We discuss why comics are suited to exploring climate change with older and younger people, and the process we used to create the Climate Comic. We then reflect on the affordances and limitations of our approach and make recommendations for future research in this area. 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spelling v2 67620 2024-09-10 Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement 82aca05941f2ff78c16feb32b01acca9 Merryn Thomas Merryn Thomas true false c3299a6d6582774d313a2c8fd714dc3e Aelwyn Williams Aelwyn Williams true false de05fcd0fb401bfcdef0b5c7fcf422f1 0000-0002-1302-3776 Aled Singleton Aled Singleton true false 018927565a5521af672be8edc1a2b08d 0000-0001-8039-1854 Carol Maddock Carol Maddock true false 6ab809844c56957c0e9773518a251516 0000-0002-3107-3945 Deborah Morgan Deborah Morgan true false 8d6e71df690e725cd44191006dac31da 0000-0001-6714-6512 Tavi Murray Tavi Murray true false 2024-09-10 The places where people live, work and spend leisure time are essential to their health and wellbeing. However, with climate change, these environments are changing. It is paramount that we understand older and younger people’s climate change perspectives, behaviours and visions for the future so that the places that matter to them can be shaped and managed effectively for health, wellbeing and sustainability.This article presents the case for using comic books to explore climate change with diverse intergenerational groups. The bilingual (Welsh/English) Climate Comic was created in South Wales, UK, as part of the ‘Understanding Older and Younger People’s PerspecTives and Imaginaries of Climate Change’ (OPTIC) project. From February to May 2023, 65 older and younger people took part in structured workshops where we used creative methods (games, collaging, comic creation, mobile and online interviews, storyboarding) to elicit intergenerational conversation, articulate intangible values and explore change. Workshops were audio-recorded, and stories were developed into a comic by illustrator Laura Sorvala. We also used comics as part of wider engagement and to stimulate ideas in a design sprint with interested groups.We discuss why comics are suited to exploring climate change with older and younger people, and the process we used to create the Climate Comic. We then reflect on the affordances and limitations of our approach and make recommendations for future research in this area. We hope that this work will stimulate others to consider using this adaptable and engaging art form for further research and engagement with younger and older people. Journal Article Journal of Global Ageing 1 19 Bristol University Press 2976-7202 9 9 2024 2024-09-09 10.1332/29767202y2024d000000011 http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/29767202y2024d000000011 COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University Other 2024-09-10T17:46:59.8544703 2024-09-10T11:52:08.1661750 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography Merryn Thomas 1 Laura Sorvala 2 Aelwyn Williams 3 Aled Singleton 0000-0002-1302-3776 4 Carol Maddock 0000-0001-8039-1854 5 Deborah Morgan 0000-0002-3107-3945 6 Tavi Murray 0000-0001-6714-6512 7 Charles Musselwhite 0000-0002-4831-2092 8 Merryn Thomas 0000-0001-8529-8245 9 67620__31289__8d32fe5ac0eb49ed967645d4be90fc9f.pdf MThomas et al_Climate Comic_accepted version.pdf 2024-09-10T14:03:04.6871999 Output 1218962 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true false
title Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement
spellingShingle Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement
Merryn Thomas
Aelwyn Williams
Aled Singleton
Carol Maddock
Deborah Morgan
Tavi Murray
title_short Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement
title_full Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement
title_fullStr Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement
title_full_unstemmed Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement
title_sort Co-creating a climate comic book: reflections on using comics in intergenerational research and engagement
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author_id_fullname_str_mv 82aca05941f2ff78c16feb32b01acca9_***_Merryn Thomas
c3299a6d6582774d313a2c8fd714dc3e_***_Aelwyn Williams
de05fcd0fb401bfcdef0b5c7fcf422f1_***_Aled Singleton
018927565a5521af672be8edc1a2b08d_***_Carol Maddock
6ab809844c56957c0e9773518a251516_***_Deborah Morgan
8d6e71df690e725cd44191006dac31da_***_Tavi Murray
author Merryn Thomas
Aelwyn Williams
Aled Singleton
Carol Maddock
Deborah Morgan
Tavi Murray
author2 Merryn Thomas
Laura Sorvala
Aelwyn Williams
Aled Singleton
Carol Maddock
Deborah Morgan
Tavi Murray
Charles Musselwhite
Merryn Thomas
format Journal article
container_title Journal of Global Ageing
container_start_page 1
publishDate 2024
institution Swansea University
issn 2976-7202
doi_str_mv 10.1332/29767202y2024d000000011
publisher Bristol University Press
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
department_str School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/29767202y2024d000000011
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description The places where people live, work and spend leisure time are essential to their health and wellbeing. However, with climate change, these environments are changing. It is paramount that we understand older and younger people’s climate change perspectives, behaviours and visions for the future so that the places that matter to them can be shaped and managed effectively for health, wellbeing and sustainability.This article presents the case for using comic books to explore climate change with diverse intergenerational groups. The bilingual (Welsh/English) Climate Comic was created in South Wales, UK, as part of the ‘Understanding Older and Younger People’s PerspecTives and Imaginaries of Climate Change’ (OPTIC) project. From February to May 2023, 65 older and younger people took part in structured workshops where we used creative methods (games, collaging, comic creation, mobile and online interviews, storyboarding) to elicit intergenerational conversation, articulate intangible values and explore change. Workshops were audio-recorded, and stories were developed into a comic by illustrator Laura Sorvala. We also used comics as part of wider engagement and to stimulate ideas in a design sprint with interested groups.We discuss why comics are suited to exploring climate change with older and younger people, and the process we used to create the Climate Comic. We then reflect on the affordances and limitations of our approach and make recommendations for future research in this area. We hope that this work will stimulate others to consider using this adaptable and engaging art form for further research and engagement with younger and older people.
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