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Introduces key terms, research traditions, debates, and histories,
and offers a sense of the new frontiers emerging in the field of
comics studies Across more than fifty original essays, Keywords for
Comics Studies provides a rich, interdisciplinary vocabulary for
comics and sequential art. The essays also identify new avenues of
research into one of the most popular and diverse visual media of
the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Keywords for Comics
Studies presents an array of inventive analyses of terms central to
the study of comics and sequential art that are traditionally
siloed in distinct lexicons: these include creative and aesthetic
terms like Ink, Creator, Border, and Panel; conceptual terms such
as Trans*, Disability, Universe, and Fantasy; genre terms like
Zine, Pornography, Superhero, and Manga; and canonical terms like
X-Men, Archie, Watchmen, and Love and Rockets. This volume ties
each specific comic studies keyword to the larger context of the
term within the humanities. Essays demonstrate how scholars,
cultural critics, and comics artists from a range of fields take up
sequential art as both an object of analysis and a medium for
developing new theories about embodiment, identity, literacy,
audience reception, genre, cultural politics, and more. Keywords
for Comics Studies revivifies the fantasy and magic of reading
comics in its kaleidoscopic view of the field's most compelling and
imaginative ideas.
Introduces key terms, research traditions, debates, and histories,
and offers a sense of the new frontiers emerging in the field of
comics studies Across more than fifty original essays, Keywords for
Comics Studies provides a rich, interdisciplinary vocabulary for
comics and sequential art. The essays also identify new avenues of
research into one of the most popular and diverse visual media of
the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Keywords for Comics
Studies presents an array of inventive analyses of terms central to
the study of comics and sequential art that are traditionally
siloed in distinct lexicons: these include creative and aesthetic
terms like Ink, Creator, Border, and Panel; conceptual terms such
as Trans*, Disability, Universe, and Fantasy; genre terms like
Zine, Pornography, Superhero, and Manga; and canonical terms like
X-Men, Archie, Watchmen, and Love and Rockets. This volume ties
each specific comic studies keyword to the larger context of the
term within the humanities. Essays demonstrate how scholars,
cultural critics, and comics artists from a range of fields take up
sequential art as both an object of analysis and a medium for
developing new theories about embodiment, identity, literacy,
audience reception, genre, cultural politics, and more. Keywords
for Comics Studies revivifies the fantasy and magic of reading
comics in its kaleidoscopic view of the field's most compelling and
imaginative ideas.
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