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Critical Approaches to Comics
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Table of Contents

Introduction: Should We Discipline the Reading of Comics? Henry JenkinsI. Form 1. Wordless Comics: The Imaginative Appeal of Peter Kuper's The SystemDavid Berona 2. Comics Modes: Caricature and Illustration in the Crumb Family's Dirty LaundryJoseph Witek 3. Image Functions: Shape and Color as Hermeneutic Images in Asterios Polyp Randy Duncan 4. Time and Narrative: Unity and Discontinuity in The InvisiblesMarc Singer 5. Mise en scene and Framing: Visual Storytelling in Lone Wolf and CubPascal Lefevre 6. Abstract Form: Sequential Dynamism and Iconostasis in Abstract Comics and Steve Ditko's Amazing Spider-ManAndrei MolotiuII. Content 7. Philosophy: "The Triumph of the Human Spirit" in X-MenJeff McLaughlin 8. Journalism: Drawing on Words to Picture the Past in Safe Area GorazdeAmy Kiste Nyberg 9. Propaganda: The Pleasures of Persuasion in Captain AmericaChristopher MurrayIII. Production 10. Political Economy: Manipulating Demand and "The Death of Superman" Mark Rogers 11. Culture of Consumption: Commodification through Superman: Return to KryptonIan Gordon 12. Ethnography of Production: Editor Axel Alonso and the Sale of Ideas Stanford Carpenter 13. Auteur Criticism: The Re-Visionary Works of Alan Moore Matthew J. Smith 14. History: Discovering the Story of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster Brad J. RiccaIV. Context 15. Genre: Reconstructing the Superhero in All Star Superman Peter Coogan 16. Ideology: The Construction of Race and History in Tintin in the CongoLeonard Rifas 17. Feminism: Second Wave Feminism in the Pages of Lois LaneJennifer K. Stuller 18. Intertextuality: Surrealist Intertextualities in Max's Bardin Ana MerinoV. Reception 19. Cultural Studies: British Girls' Comics, Readers and Memories Mel Gibson 20. Ethnography: Wearing One's Fandom Jeffrey A. Brown 21. Critical Ethnography: The Comics Shop as Cultural Clubhouse Brian Swafford

About the Author

Matthew J. Smith is Professor of Communication at Wittenberg University. He regularly teaches "Graphic Storytelling" and leads an annual field study at Comic-Con International. Recent books include The Power of Comics: History, Form and Culture (with Randy Duncan) and Online Communication: Linking Technology, Culture, and Identity (with Andrew F. Wood). Randy Duncan is Professor of Communication at Henderson State University. He is co-author of The Power of Comics: History, Form and Culture (with Matthew J. Smith). Duncan is a co-founder (with Peter Coogan) of the Comics Arts Conference, and serves on the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Comic Art and the Board of Directors of the Institute for Comics Studies.

Reviews

"In this volume, ably edited by Randy Duncan and Matthew J. Smith, some of the brightest and best international comics critics have joined forces to apply a variety of theoretical approaches to selected major texts to elucidate their appeal for the modern reader. The result is a user-friendly guide for professors, students, and general readers alike. Criticism has seldom been more fun." --M. Thomas Inge, Blackwell Professor of Humanities, Randolph-Macon College "The strength of this overview is in its truly admirable breadth--the broad range of objects it analyzes along with the various methodologies it brings to bear on comics. This volume is a valuable introduction to the lexicon of what many are now calling 'comics studies' that usefully seeks to enlarge the emerging field as opposed to fixing it down." --Hillary Chute, Neubauer Family Assistant Professor, English, University of Chicago

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