Ms. Amritha Radhakrishnan is a Ph.D. candidate and Teaching Assistant at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Uttarakhand. The larger fields within which her doctoral research is embedded are medical humanities, gender studies, memory studies and visual studies. Drawing theoretical frameworks from these fields, she studies the entailment of traumatic memories of illnesses in graphic narratives using the unique formal properties of the comic medium and the disentanglement of represented memory by readers.
Ms. Radhakrishnan is a recipient of the JRF fellowship awarded by the University Grants Commission (UGC), Government of India for doctoral research and is currently a Senior Research Fellow (SRF). She holds a master’s degree in English literature from Sacred Heart College, Kerala and a bachelor’s in English literature and communication studies (double major) from St. Xavier’s College, Kerala, where she was a university rank holder. She has presented papers at numerous national and international conferences, including “The Child of the Future” Conference hosted by the University of Cambridge, where she also mediated a session. Ms. Radhakrishnan has been a resource person for a talk series organized by the Sacred Heart College, where she spoke on the various possibilities of graphic medicine as a field. She has co-authored an article on the functions of graphic illness narratives, published by the Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, Taylor & Francis (2022). Her forthcoming book chapter on representations of chronic pain in the graphic medium will be published in a volume called Keywords/Images in Graphic Medicine. Apart from her research, she devotes her time to travel and cinema. She is a trained Carnatic classical singer and can speak five languages. She is passionate about learning new languages and understanding different cultures.
Ms. Radhakrishnan’s doctoral dissertation focuses on the emergence of graphic medicine, its production and consumption, with particular emphasis on the socio-political role of personal illness narratives in the advocacy for rights and in developing health literacy. As a Fulbright-Nehru Doctoral Research fellow, she is furthering her research by gaining access to cartoon museums and libraries and by engaging in conversations with inter-disciplinary scholars in the fields pertaining to her doctoral research.