Anthropocenes in “The Many Deaths of Laila Starr”

In his article on “Comics Anthropocenes,” Mike Classon Frangos argues that the unique nature of the Laila Starr story highlights a world view that moves away from “undifferentiated humanity” and into a more complex portrayal of intersecting timescales. #lailastarr #comicsstudies 1/9




“The turn away from scientific progress is reflected in the change of locations from the hypermodern city of Mumbai to the beach in Goa, associated with a countercultural search for alternatives to Western modernity.” 5/9

In this case, the choice of location symbolizes Darius’s rejection of unfettered progress. Darius chooses death, in more ways than one, and must accept a slower pace and slower space in order to signal that decision most effectively to the reader. 6/9

The choice to send the secret of immortality adrift in the ocean thus represents a further step away from humanity, a step toward the primordial, even. As the maker of this decision, Laila, having generated perspective from her many deaths, is likewise implicated. 7/9

For Frangos, this narrative participates in a broader speculative fiction movement that “call[s] into question the ‘human’ as a geological force.” The city, the planet, the ocean, the cosmos, all are presented in Laila Starr as bigger than any one life. 8/9

Laila Starr is ultimately a narrative that affirms the value of life through the act of dying, and thus an acceptance of our very small place in a very large world is the key to unlocking the empathy necessary to grasp that choice and the worldview it endorses. 9/9