Teaching the Graphic Novel

by Tabachnick, Stephen E.
ISBN: 9781603290616
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Overview

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 dessinée)-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 contentThe volume concludes with a selected bibliography of the graphic novel and sequential art.
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Author: Tabachnick, Stephen E.
  • ISBN: 9781603290616
  • Condition: Used
  • Dimensions: 8.90 x 1.10
  • Number Of Pages: 361
  • Publication Year: 2009

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