Jenny & the Eddies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

AuthorRichard Clinghan
LanguageEnglish
SubjectFiction dealing with real issues
Published1 January 2020
Jenny & the Eddies
AuthorRichard Clinghan
LanguageEnglish
SubjectFiction dealing with real issues
Published1 January 2020
Publication placeNew Zealand
Media typeComic
ISBN9780473529895

Jenny & the Eddies is a comic book that promotes vaccine safety and confronts conspiracy theorists who oppose their use. Created by New Zealand-based general practitioner Richard Clinghan and published in 2020, it is a fairy tale with colourful drawings likely to appeal to young children and but also has a deeper message about the importance of vaccinations which would be relevant to teenagers and adults. Written initially to counter misinformation about the measles vaccine, the comic has received media attention because of its relevance to COVID-19.

Richard Clinghan

Richard Clinghan was born in Northern Ireland and moved to New Zealand to 2010. He works as a General Practitioner and Rural Hospital Medicine Generalist at the Oxford Community Health Centre (New Zealand).[1][2]

Clinghan was inspired to create Jenny & the Eddies after the New Zealand 2019 measles epidemic to have in his waiting room to reassure parents that vaccines were safe. [3] Clinghan said the goal was to encourage those who were resistant to vaccines, to get vaccinated.[4]

Clinghan acknowledged that he did a lot of work on the comic in lockdown in New Zealand during COVID-19, and said the initiative was an attempt to connect with both children and parents to alleviate concerns about vaccines in a creative way.[5]

Clinghan received support from Funtime Comics - a nonprofit group of comic creators established in 1991 by students at the University of Canterbury.[6] He told Funtime that he had been influenced by Scott McCloud because his works Making Comics and Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art showed how comics worked and that they could be "magical" and encourage the use of the imagination. [7] Clinghan concluded that "drawing can help ease your mind, settle your worries and give you an opportunity to find a moment to refocus on things that add the most value to your life. This is usually your family and friends".[7]:p.4

Clinghan contributed a segment of Jenny & the Eddies and a comic White Blood Cells and Blueprint, to the 2020 Funtime issue, funtimecomics#33: Tales from Pandemia (comics inspired by the global coronavirus pandemic). [8]

According to Zahra Shahtahmasebi, Jenny & the Eddies was first launched at the Christchurch Armageddon Expo in July 2020.[9]

Theme

The book's theme is that vaccines have been scientifically proven to be safe and are a victim of their own success. The storyline offers the opportunity for characters to come to the realisation that vaccines can take care of themselves and only need to be trusted by people. The text challenges the reader to imagine how viruses and vaccines might interact if they had human behaviours and qualities.[10] Viruses are monsters that silently attack and cause suffering, while a vaccine is a dog that is always loyal and protective of people. Jenny & the Eddies promotes vaccine safety and reassures concerned parents in a non-confrontational manner. Clinghan has said he preferred not to discuss conspiracy theories directly,[4] but the comic does explore how anti-vaccination views can misguide parents and the storyline and characters create situations that expose misinformation about vaccines and how to stand up to these theories.[11]

Plot

When Jimmy gets sick in the elven kingdom after playing near the forest, the elven children share stories about when they were attacked by the forest monsters. Jenny asks her grandfather about the forest monsters and he says they had always been around, but wonders why 'each monster only visits a child once in a lifetime'. Jenny reads a book left out by her grandpa that tells of a legend about a beast in the forest that can protect elves from the monsters and she goes in search of it. While in the forest, she gets saved from the monsters by a friendly 'dog-like' creature that she takes home and names Eddie. It becomes known that there are more Eddies in the forest and soon most of the elves in the kingdom have one, and are all well and happy. However, some of the elves begin sharing stories about the Eddies, saying they are causing problems and there is a move to stop giving them to the children. In particular, Jeremy tells lies about the Eddies and even says they make the children whistle – something the kingdom has previously complained about. Jeremy tries to trick the community into believing that if the Eddies are split into three, the forest monsters will be scared of them and the kingdom will be safe. When the children in the kingdom start making beautiful music, the elves realise that they were so infatuated with blaming the Eddies for causing the whistling, that they did not put their energies into helping the children control it. The whistling was something that the elves would all do together to drown out the whisper monsters and ignore their lies so that eventually, they would go away. When enough elves believe this, happiness returns to the kingdom.

Reception

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI