Graphic novels are now appearing in a great variety of courses: composition, literature, drama, popular culture, travel, art, translation. The thirty-four essays in this volume explore issues that the new art form has pos...

Buy Now From Amazon

Graphic novels are now appearing in a great variety of courses: composition, literature, drama, popular culture, travel, art, translation. The thirty-four essays in this volume explore issues that the new art form has posed for teachers at the university level. Among the subjects addressed are

  • terminology (graphic narrative vs. sequential art, comics vs. comix)
  • the three outstanding comics-producing cultures today: the American, the Japanese (manga), and the Franco-Belgian (the bande dessin�e)
  • the differences between the techniques of graphic narrative and prose narrative,and between the reading patterns for each
  • the connections between the graphic novel and film
  • the lives of the new genre�s practitioners (e.g., Robert Crumb, Harvey Pekar)
  • women�s contributions to the field (e.g., Lynda Barry)
  • how the graphic novel has been used to probe difficult moments in history (the Holocaust, 9/11), deal with social and racial injustice, and voice political satire
  • postmodernism in the graphic novel (e.g., in the work of Chris Ware)
  • how the American superhero developed in the Depression and World War II
  • comix and the 1960s counterculture
  • the challenges of teaching graphic novels that contain violence and sexual content

The volume concludes with a selected bibliography of the graphic novel and sequential art.



  • Used Book in Good Condition
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Similar Products

The Graphic Novel: An Introduction (Cambridge Introductions to Literature (Paperback))Understanding Comics: The Invisible ArtComics: A Global History, 1968 to the PresentGraphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative (Will Eisner Instructional Books)A Comics Studies ReaderThe System of ComicsFun Home: A Family Tragicomic