|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Sequential images are as natural at conveying narratives as verbal
language, and have appeared throughout human history, from cave
paintings and tapestries right through to modern comics.
Contemporary research on this visual language of sequential images
has been scattered across several fields: linguistics, psychology,
anthropology, art education, comics studies, and others. Only
recently has this disparate research begun to be incorporated into
a coherent understanding. In The Visual Narrative Reader, Neil Cohn
collects chapters that cross these disciplinary divides from many
of the foremost international researchers who explore fundamental
questions about visual narratives. How does the style of images
impact their understanding? How are metaphors and complex meanings
conveyed by images? How is meaning understood across sequential
images? How do children produce and comprehend sequential images?
Are visual narratives beneficial for education and literacy? Do
visual narrative systems differ across cultures and historical time
periods? This book provides a foundation of research for readers to
engage in these fundamental questions and explore the most vital
thinking about visual narrative. It collects important papers and
introduces review chapters summarizing the literature on specific
approaches to understanding visual narratives. The result is a
comprehensive "reader" that can be used as a coursebook, a
researcher resource and a broad overview of fascinating topics
suitable for anyone interested in the growing field of the visual
language of comics and visual narratives.
Comics are a global phenomenon, and yet it’s easy to distinguish
the visual styles of comics from Asia, Europe, or the United
States. But, do the structures of these visual narratives differ in
more subtle ways? Might these comics actually be drawn in different
visual languages that vary in their structures across cultures? To
address these questions, The Patterns of Comics seeks evidence
through a sustained analysis of an annotated corpus of over 36,000
panels from 350+ comics from Asia, Europe, and North America. This
data-driven approach reveals the cross-cultural variation in
symbology, layout, and storytelling between various visual
languages, and shows how comics have changed across 80 years. It
compares, for example, the subtypes within American comics and
Japanese manga, and analyzes the formal properties of Bill
Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes across its entire 10-year run.
Throughout, it not only uncovers the patterns in and across the
panels of comics, but shows how these regularities in the visual
languages of comics connect to the organizing principles of all
languages.
**Nominated for the 2021 Eisner Award for Best Academic/Scholarly
Work** Drawings and sequential images are so pervasive in
contemporary society that we may take their understanding for
granted. But how transparent are they really, and how universally
are they understood? Combining recent advances from linguistics,
cognitive science, and clinical psychology, this book argues that
visual narratives involve greater complexity and require a lot more
decoding than widely thought. Although increasingly used beyond the
sphere of entertainment as materials in humanitarian, educational,
and experimental contexts, Neil Cohn demonstrates that their
universal comprehension cannot be assumed. Instead, understanding a
visual language requires a fluency that is contingent on exposure
and practice with a graphic system. Bringing together a rich but
scattered literature on how people comprehend, and learn to
comprehend, a sequence of images, this book coalesces research from
a diverse range of fields into a broader interdisciplinary view of
visual narrative to ask: Who Understands Comics?
Comics are a global phenomenon, and yet it’s easy to distinguish
the visual styles of comics from Asia, Europe, or the United
States. But, do the structures of these visual narratives differ in
more subtle ways? Might these comics actually be drawn in different
visual languages that vary in their structures across cultures? To
address these questions, The Patterns of Comics seeks evidence
through a sustained analysis of an annotated corpus of over 36,000
panels from 350+ comics from Asia, Europe, and North America. This
data-driven approach reveals the cross-cultural variation in
symbology, layout, and storytelling between various visual
languages, and shows how comics have changed across 80 years. It
compares, for example, the subtypes within American comics and
Japanese manga, and analyzes the formal properties of Bill
Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes across its entire 10-year run.
Throughout, it not only uncovers the patterns in and across the
panels of comics, but shows how these regularities in the visual
languages of comics connect to the organizing principles of all
languages.
**Nominated for the 2021 Eisner Award for Best Academic/Scholarly
Work** Drawings and sequential images are so pervasive in
contemporary society that we may take their understanding for
granted. But how transparent are they really, and how universally
are they understood? Combining recent advances from linguistics,
cognitive science, and clinical psychology, this book argues that
visual narratives involve greater complexity and require a lot more
decoding than widely thought. Although increasingly used beyond the
sphere of entertainment as materials in humanitarian, educational,
and experimental contexts, Neil Cohn demonstrates that their
universal comprehension cannot be assumed. Instead, understanding a
visual language requires a fluency that is contingent on exposure
and practice with a graphic system. Bringing together a rich but
scattered literature on how people comprehend, and learn to
comprehend, a sequence of images, this book coalesces research from
a diverse range of fields into a broader interdisciplinary view of
visual narrative to ask: Who Understands Comics?
Sequential images are as natural at conveying narratives as verbal
language, and have appeared throughout human history, from cave
paintings and tapestries right through to modern comics.
Contemporary research on this visual language of sequential images
has been scattered across several fields: linguistics, psychology,
anthropology, art education, comics studies, and others. Only
recently has this disparate research begun to be incorporated into
a coherent understanding. In The Visual Narrative Reader, Neil Cohn
collects chapters that cross these disciplinary divides from many
of the foremost international researchers who explore fundamental
questions about visual narratives. How does the style of images
impact their understanding? How are metaphors and complex meanings
conveyed by images? How is meaning understood across sequential
images? How do children produce and comprehend sequential images?
Are visual narratives beneficial for education and literacy? Do
visual narrative systems differ across cultures and historical time
periods? This book provides a foundation of research for readers to
engage in these fundamental questions and explore the most vital
thinking about visual narrative. It collects important papers and
introduces review chapters summarizing the literature on specific
approaches to understanding visual narratives. The result is a
comprehensive "reader" that can be used as a coursebook, a
researcher resource and a broad overview of fascinating topics
suitable for anyone interested in the growing field of the visual
language of comics and visual narratives.
Drawings and sequential images are an integral part of human
expression dating back at least as far as cave paintings, and in
contemporary society appear most prominently in comics. Despite
this fundamental part of human identity, little work has explored
the comprehension and cognitive underpinnings of visual
narratives-until now. This work presents a provocative theory: that
drawings and sequential images are structured the same as language.
Building on contemporary theories from linguistics and cognitive
psychology, it argues that comics are written in a visual language
of sequential images that combines with text. Like spoken and
signed languages, visual narratives use a lexicon of systematic
patterns stored in memory, strategies for combining these patterns
into meaningful units, and a hierarchic grammar governing the
combination of sequential images into coherent expressions. Filled
with examples and illustrations, this book details each of these
levels of structure, explains how cross-cultural differences arise
in diverse visual languages of the world, and describes what the
newest neuroscience research reveals about the brain's
comprehension of visual narratives. From this emerges the
foundation for a new line of research within the linguistic and
cognitive sciences, raising intriguing questions about the
connections between language and the diversity of humans'
expressive behaviours in the mind and brain.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|