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Showing 1 - 5 of
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Contributions by Michelle Ann Abate, William S. Armour, Alison
Bechdel, Jennifer Camper, Tesla Cariani, Matthew Cheney, Hillary
Chute, Edmond (Edo) Ernest dit Alban, Ramzi Fawaz, Margaret Galvan,
Justin Hall, Lara Hedberg, Susanne Hochreiter, Sheena C. Howard,
Rebecca Hutton, remus jackson, Keiko Miyajima, Chinmay Murali,
Marina Rauchenbacher, Katharina Serles, Sathyaraj Venkatesan, and
Lin Young The LGBTQ+ Comics Studies Reader explores the exemplary
trove of LGBTQ+ comics that coalesced in the underground and
alternative comix scenes of the mid-1960s and in the decades after.
Through insightful essays and interviews with leading comics
figures, volume contributors illuminate the critical opportunities,
current interactions, and future directions of these comics. This
heavily illustrated volume engages with the work of preeminent
artists across the globe, such as Howard Cruse, Edie Fake, Justin
Hall, Jennifer Camper, and Alison Bechdel, whose iconic artwork is
reproduced within the volume. Further, it addresses and questions
the possibilities of LGBTQ+ comics from various scholarly positions
and multiple geographical vantages, covering a range of queer lived
experience. Along the way, certain LGBTQ+ touchstones emerge
organically and inevitably-pride, coming out, chosen families,
sexual health, gender, risk, and liberation. Featuring comics
figures across the gamut of the industry, from renowned scholars to
emerging creators and webcomics artists, the reader explores a
range of approaches to LGBTQ+ comics-queer history, gender and
sexuality theory, memory studies, graphic medicine, genre studies,
biography, and more-and speaks to the diversity of publishing forms
and media that shape queer comics and their reading communities.
Chapters trace the connections of LGBTQ+ comics from the panel,
strip, comic book, graphic novel, anthology, and graphic memoir to
their queer readership, the LGBTQ+ history they make visible, the
often still quite fragile LGBTQ+ distribution networks, the coded
queer intelligence they deploy, and the community-sustaining energy
and optimism they conjure. Above all, The LGBTQ+ Comics Studies
Reader highlights the efficacy of LGBTQ+ comics as a kind of common
ground for creators and readers.
Never before published, White Rose and the Red is the fictional
biography of Elizabeth Siddall, wife of English poet and painter
Dante Gabriel Rossetti. This extraordinary novel explores the
charged interpersonal relationships between and among Siddall,
Rossetti, and other key members of the pre-Raphaelite movement,
including William Morris and John Ruskin, in an effort to depict
struggles of nineteenth-century women within the avant-garde
sphere. During H.D.'s lifetime, publishers shied away from the
novel's radically unconventional hybrid form that combines elements
of historical nonfiction, fiction, and biography. As part of the
dense and allusive prose trilogy written during and after World War
II (along with The Sword Went Out to Sea and The Mystery), White
Rose and the Red exemplifies the mythic theme that H.D. saw as
unifying all her writing. It also examines how Siddall - a
controversial muse and model - became the iconic figure of an
artistic movement. In her clear, energetic, and critically informed
introduction, Alison Halsall situates H.D.'s work within an
analytical framework that examines factors of gender, class, and
spiritualism, which shaped Siddall's posthumous reputation. Halsall
enhances the edition by pointing out its relevance to important
issues within H.D. scholarship and analyzes Victorian influences on
modernist self-definition.
Contributions by Michelle Ann Abate, William S. Armour, Alison
Bechdel, Jennifer Camper, Tesla Cariani, Matthew Cheney, Hillary
Chute, Edmond (Edo) Ernest dit Alban, Ramzi Fawaz, Margaret Galvan,
Justin Hall, Lara Hedberg, Susanne Hochreiter, Sheena C. Howard,
Rebecca Hutton, remus jackson, Keiko Miyajima, Chinmay Murali,
Marina Rauchenbacher, Katharina Serles, Sathyaraj Venkatesan, and
Lin Young The LGBTQ+ Comics Studies Reader explores the exemplary
trove of LGBTQ+ comics that coalesced in the underground and
alternative comix scenes of the mid-1960s and in the decades after.
Through insightful essays and interviews with leading comics
figures, volume contributors illuminate the critical opportunities,
current interactions, and future directions of these comics. This
heavily illustrated volume engages with the work of preeminent
artists across the globe, such as Howard Cruse, Edie Fake, Justin
Hall, Jennifer Camper, and Alison Bechdel, whose iconic artwork is
reproduced within the volume. Further, it addresses and questions
the possibilities of LGBTQ+ comics from various scholarly positions
and multiple geographical vantages, covering a range of queer lived
experience. Along the way, certain LGBTQ+ touchstones emerge
organically and inevitably-pride, coming out, chosen families,
sexual health, gender, risk, and liberation. Featuring comics
figures across the gamut of the industry, from renowned scholars to
emerging creators and webcomics artists, the reader explores a
range of approaches to LGBTQ+ comics-queer history, gender and
sexuality theory, memory studies, graphic medicine, genre studies,
biography, and more-and speaks to the diversity of publishing forms
and media that shape queer comics and their reading communities.
Chapters trace the connections of LGBTQ+ comics from the panel,
strip, comic book, graphic novel, anthology, and graphic memoir to
their queer readership, the LGBTQ+ history they make visible, the
often still quite fragile LGBTQ+ distribution networks, the coded
queer intelligence they deploy, and the community-sustaining energy
and optimism they conjure. Above all, The LGBTQ+ Comics Studies
Reader highlights the efficacy of LGBTQ+ comics as a kind of common
ground for creators and readers.
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