"WITH GREAT POWER THERE MUST ALSO COME -- GREAT RESPONSIBILITY!"

Stan Lee, "Spider-Man!" Amazing Fantasy No. 15 (Sept. 1962)

Monday, December 27, 2010

New From Continuum

Do The Gods Wear Capes? : Spirituality, Fantasy, and Superheroes 
by Ben Saunders

Imprint: Continuum
Series: New Directions in Religion and Literature
Pub. date: 11 Jul 2011
ISBN: 9780826441980
192 Pages, paperback
World rights
Translation Rights Available
$21.95


A consideration of the modern Superhero comic as an expression of spiritual desire, showing what Superheroes can teach about our most essential human needs.


Description

Brash, bold, and sometimes brutal, superheroes might seem to epitomize modern pop-culture at its most melodramatic and mindless. But according to Ben Saunders, the appeal of the superhero is fundamentally metaphysical - even spiritual - in nature. In chapter-length analyses of the early comic book adventures of Superman, Wonder Woman, Spider-Man, and Iron-Man, Saunders explores a number of complex philosophical and theological issues, including: the problem of evil; the will-to-power; the tension between intimacy and vulnerability; and the challenge of love, in the face of mortality. He concludes that comic book fantasies of the superhuman ironically reveal more than we might care to admit about our human limitations, even as they expose the falsehood of the characteristically modern opposition between religion and science. Clearly and passionately written, this insightful and at times exhilarating book should delight all readers who believe in the redemptive capacity of the imagination, regardless of whether they consider themselves comic book fans.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements \ INTRODUCTION: The Power of Love \ 1. SUPERMAN: Truth, Justice, and All That Stuff \ 2. WONDER WOMAN: Bondage and Liberation \ 3. SPIDER-MAN: Heroic Failure and Spiritual Triumph \ 4. IRON MAN: Techno-Faith \ CODA: Modern Gods \ APPENDIX: Methods and Problems in Superhero Studies \ Notes \ Index

Author(s)

Ben Saunders is Associate Professor of English at the University of Oregon. He is author of Desiring Donne: Poetry, Sexuality, Interpretation (Harvard University Press, 2006) and co-editor, with Roger Beebe and Denise Fulbrook, of Rock Over the Edge: Essays in Popular Music Culture (Duke University Press, 2002).




Manga: An Anthology of Global and Cultural Perspectives 
edited by Toni Johnson-Woods

Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 15 Apr 2010
ISBN: 9780826429384
368 Pages, paperback
World rights
Translation Rights Available
$27.95

A collection of essays by an international cast of scholars, experts, and fans, providing a definitive, one-stop Manga  resource.


Description

Once upon a time, one had to read Japanese in order to enjoy manga. Today manga has become a global phenomenon, attracting audiences in North America, Europe, Africa, and Australia. The style has become so popular, in fact, that in the US and UK publishers are appropriating the manga style in a variety of print material, resulting in the birth of harlequin mangas which combine popular romance fiction titles with manga aesthetics. Comic publishers such as Dark Horse and DC Comics are translating Japanese “classics”, like Akira, into English. And of course it wasn’t long before Shakespeare received the manga treatment. So what is manga?
Manga roughly translates as “whimsical pictures” and its long history can be traced all the way back to picture books of eighteenth century Japan. Today, it comes in two basic forms: anthology magazines (such as Shukan Shonen Jampu) that contain several serials and manga ‘books’ (tankobon) that collect long-running serials from the anthologies and reprint them in one volume. The anthologies contain several serials, generally appear weekly and are so thick, up to 800 pages, that they are colloquially known as phone books. Sold at newspaper stands and in convenience stores, they often attract crowds of people who gather to read their favorite magazine.

Containing sections addressing the manga industry on an international scale, the different genres, formats and artists, as well the fans themselves, Manga: An Anthology of Global and Cultural Perspectives is an important collection of essays by an international cast of scholars, experts, and fans, and provides a one-stop resource for all those who want to learn more about manga, as well as for anybody teaching a course on the subject.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Section One: The Industry
    The History of Manga - Jean-Marie Bouissou
    Manga in Asia - John A. Lent
    Manga in Europe - Paul M. Malone
    Understanding Manga Merchandising: An Australian Case
        Study - Jason Bainbridge and Craig Norris
    Shakespeare as Manga - Emma Hayley
    Globalizing from Japan to Hong Kong and Beyond -
        Wendy Siuyi Wong
    Manga and the Critics - Toni Johnson-Woods
Section Two: The Genres & Formats & Artists
    Overview of Manga Genres - Mio Bryce and Jason Davis
    Ryori Manga - Lorie Brau
    Shojo Manga at Home and Abroad - Jennifer Prough
    Beautiful Boys in Japanese Women's Comics - Mark
        McClelland
    Meanings of Manga - Neil Cohn
    The Aesthetics of Manga - Christopher Couch
    Visual Representations and Manga - Craig Norris
    A Look at Takahashi Rumiko, Watase Yu, Shinohara
        Chie, Hikawa Kyoko, Itsuki Natsumi - Mio Bryce
    Osamu Tezuka and Family: Early Pioneers of Manga -
        Wendy Goldberg
    Miuchi Suzue and Intertextuality - Rebecca Suter
    Miyasaki's Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind: Manga
        into Anime and Its Reception - Marc Hairston
Section Three: The Fans
    Fandom in Germany, Italy and France - Bouissou, Pellitteri
        and Dolle-Weinkauff
    Scanlation - James Rampant
    American Otaku and the Search for the Authentic Text -
        Stacy Rue
Conclusion

Author(s)

Toni Johnson-Woods is President of the Pop Culture Association of Australia (PopCANNZ) and Senior Lecturer in the English, Media Studies and Art History School at the University of Queensland.




Thor: Myth to Marvel 
by Martin Arnold

Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 21 Jul 2011
ISBN: 9781441135421
256 Pages, paperback
World rights
Translation Rights Available
$29.95

An exploration of how the legend of Thor has been adopted, adapted and transformed through history.

Description

The myths of the Norse god Thor were preserved in the Icelandic Eddas, set down in the early Middle Ages. The bane of giants and trolls, Thor was worshipped as the last line of defence against all that threatened early Nordic society.

Thor’s significance persisted long after the Christian conversion and, in the mid-eighteenth century, Thor resumed a symbolic prominence among northern countries. Admired and adopted in Scandinavia and Germany, he became central to the rhetoric of national romanticism and to more belligerent assertions of nationalism.

Resurrected in the latter part of the twentieth century in Marvel Magazine, Thor was further transformed into an articulation both of an anxious male sexuality and of a parallel nervousness regarding American foreign policy.

Martin Arnold explores the extraordinary regard in which Thor has been held since medieval times and considers why and how his myth has been adopted, adapted and transformed.
Table of Contents

Introduction:Reverberations throughout History \ 1. The Giant Killer: Thor in Old Norse Mythology \ 2. Damnation and Resurrection: Thor from the Christian Conversion to the Enlightenment \ 3. The Romancing of Thor \ 4. Distant Thunder: Thor and the Nationalists \ 5. The God of War: Thor and the Fascists \ 6. Marvellous Thor \ Appendix \ Bibliography \ Index

Author(s)

Martin Arnold is Professor of Scandinavian Literature at Hull University. He is the author of The Vikings (Continuum, 2006).

New/Recent from McFarland

I was browsing the McFarland Publishing website last week and came upon the following:

Heroes of Film, Comics and American Culture: Essays on Real and Fictional Defenders of Home 
Edited by Lisa M. DeTora
ISBN 978-0-7864-3827-3
37 photos, bibliography, index
347pp. softcover 2009
Price: $39.95

Description
These essays consider the way that heroes and the domestic spaces they defend have been represented in 20th and early 21st century popular forms, especially film, comic books and material culture. The authors work in various academic disciplines such as English, film studies, history and human geography, thus bringing a rich variety of theoretical vantage points to the reader in a single collection.

Topics covered include Tales of Suspense, Captain America, gender and popular culture during World War II, Iron Man and the military-industrial complex, Batman, Xena: Warrior Princess, The Ring, Ridley Scott, and many others.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments v
Introduction: Real Americans, Heroes, and Home Fronts
LISA DETORA 1

1. “A Labyrinth Without a Clew”: Husbands, Houses and Harpies in Richard Matheson’s The Shrinking Man and Mark Z. Danielewski’s House of Leaves
DARA DOWNEY 17
2. Beautiful Results: Whitman’s Democratic Vision and the Evolution of America in Michael Cunningham’s Specimen Days
ANDREW SCHOPP 40
3. Defending the Heartland: Technology and the Future in The Phantom Empire (1935)
CYNTHIA J. MILLER 61
4. Temporary Heroes “In the Service of Mars”: Women in Uniform, Factories, and the Kitchen during World War II
HEATHER MOLYNEAUX 77
5. Fighting for Home: Masculinity and the Constitution of the Domestic in Tales of Suspense and Captain America
JASON DITTMER 96
6. “Axe the Axis” and “Bombers Aloft”: Militaristic Play During the Second World War
LISA L. OSSIAN 117
7. To Protect and to Threaten: Gary Cooper and the Gender Politics of High Noon (1952)
STEVEN T. SHEEHAN 134
8. Hero of the Military-Industrial Complex: Reading Iron Man Through Burke’s Dramatism
RONALD C. THOMAS, JR. 152
9. Professional Killers at Home: Domesticity and the Deregulated Subject
LACHLAN MACDOWALL 167
10. The Teacher as Hero: Representations in Late Cold War Film and Culture
LEAH SADYKOV 181
11. Terrorist, Technocrat, and Feudal Lord: Batman in Comic Book and Film Adaptations
MARC EDWARD DIPAOLO 194
12. Knocked Up, Not Knocked Out: Xena: Warrior Princess, Pregnant Action Hero
MARY JO LODGE 218
13. The Naked Hero and Model Man: Costumed Identity in Comic Book Narratives
DAVID COUGHLAN 234
14. Mommy, Baby, Ghost: The Technological Chain Letter and the Nuclear Family in The Ring
CHUCK ROBINSON 253
15. Waking Up the Mythic American Neo
JAYSON BAKER 268
16. Ridley Scott’s Epics: Gender of Violence
DANIELLE GLASSMEYER 281
17. “Real Americans”: Inclusion, Difference, and Tolerance in Post 9/11 Nationalist Discourse
RANDY COTA 301

Afterword
MALIA K. DU MONT 315
For Further Reading—TEEVRAT GARG 319
About the Contributors 323
Index 329


About the Author
Lisa M. DeTora is an assistant professor and assistant director in the English department at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania.


The Rise and Reason of Comics and Graphic Literature: Critical Essays on the Form 
Edited by Joyce Goggin and Dan Hassler-Forest
ISBN 978-0-7864-4294-2
20 photos, notes, bibliography, index
244pp. softcover 2010
Price: $35.00

Description
These 15 essays investigate comic books and graphic novels, beginning with the early development of these media. The essays also place the work in a cultural context, addressing theory and terminology, adaptations of comic books, the superhero genre, and comic books and graphic novels that deal with history and nonfiction. By addressing the topic from a wide range of perspectives, the book offers readers a nuanced and comprehensive picture of current scholarship in the subject area.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Joyce Goggin and Dan Hassler-Forest 1

Part One. Origin Stories: History and Development of the Genre
1. Of Gutters and Guttersnipes: Hogarth’s Legacy
Joyce Goggin 5
2. Ridiculous Rebellion: George L. Carlson and the Recovery of Jingle Jangle Comics
Daniel F. Yezbick 25
3. Suspended in Mid-Month: Serialized Storytelling in Comics
Daniel Wüllner 42

Part Two. What We Talk About When We Talk About Comics: Theory and Terminology
4 Balloonics: The Visuals of Balloons in Comics
Charles Forceville, Tony Veale, and Kurt Feyaerts 56
5. Remediation and the Sense of Time in Graphic Narratives
Kai Mikkonen 74
6. Brick by Brick: Chris Ware’s Architecture of the Page
Angela Szczepaniak 87

Part Three. Out of the Gutter: Comics and Adaptations
7. It Was the Best of Two Worlds, It Was the Worst of Two Worlds: The Adaptation of Novels in Comics and Graphic Novels
Dirk Vanderbeke 104
8. The 300 Controversy: A Case Study in the Politics of Adaptation
Dan Hassler-Forest 119

Part Four. Men in Tights: The Superhero Paradigm
9. The Last Action Hero’s Swan Song: Graphic Novelty or Never-Ending Story?
Andreas Rauscher 130
10. Extraordinary People: The Superhero Genre and Celebrity Culture in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
Jonathan E. Goldman 142
11. Warren Ellis’s Planetary: The Archaeology of Superheroes
Karin Kukkonen 154

Part Five. Drawing History: Nonfiction in Comics
12. Reconsidering Comics Journalism: Information and Experience in Joe Sacco’s Palestine
Benjamin Woo 166
13. Comics, Trauma and Cultural Memory(ies) of 9/11
Christophe Dony and Caroline van Linthout 178
14. “Be vewy, vewy quiet. We’re hunting wippers”: A Barthesian Analysis of the Construction of Fact and Fiction in Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell’s From Hell
Julia Round 188
15. Graphic Black Nationalism: Visualizing Political Narratives in the Graphic Novel
James Braxton Peterson 202

About the Contributors 223
Works Cited 227
Index 237


About the Author
Joyce Goggin is an associate professor of literature, film and new media at the University of Amsterdam and Head of Studies at Amsterdam University College. Her primary research is on gambling and its representation in various media, though she has published on topics including film adaptation and Jane Austen, the tarot in literature, film serialization, The Gilmore Girls and addiction, and disaster capitalism.
Dan Hassler-Forest teaches media studies and English literature at the University of Amsterdam, where he is currently finishing his dissertation on superheroes in post-9/11 popular culture.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

New Telefilms from Cartoon Network

Cartoon Network premiered two comic-based telefilms last week.

The first was Firebreather based on the series created by Phil Hester and Andy Kuhn and published by Image Comics. The protagonist is a teenaged boy half-dragon and half-human. I append the teaser trailer below; a longer trailer can be accessed at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ApoLKbwU_VQ&feature=channel. The film is not yet available on DVD but can be purchased on iTunes for $9.99





The second telefilm was Young Justice a pilot film for the forthcoming animated series (launching in January 2011) and inspired by the long-running Young Justice series. As was true with the comic, the animated series features the sidekicks, young relatives, and (in the case of Superman) teenaged clones of members of the Justice League.


Recent Scholarship on Stardust

Extrapolation 51.2 (Summer 2010) arrived this week with the following contents of interest to the blog:

Paula Brown, "Stardust as Allegorical Bildungsroman: An Apology For Platonic Idealism," pp. 216-34.

Complete contents and further details on the journal's website.

Monday, November 22, 2010

IJOCA 12.2-3 Contents

As promised, here are the contents for IJOCA 12.2-3:

Vol. 12, No. 2/3, Fall 2010
708 pages / 38 Articles
Zulkiflee Anwar Ulhaque

John A. Lent  1 Editor’s Note
Fabrice Leroy 2 Yves Chaland and Lue Cornillon’s Rewriting of Classical Belgian Comics in Captivant: From Graphic Homage to Implicit Criticism
Giancarla Unser-Schutz 25 Exploring the Role of Language in Manga: Text Types, Their Usages, and Their Distributions
Rick Marschall 44 Nurturing the Butterfly: My Life in Comic Art Studies
Derik A. Badman 91 Talking, Thinking, and Seeing in Pictures: Narration, Focalization, and Ocularization in Comics Narratives
Enrique Garcia 112 Coon Imagery in Will Eisner’s The Spirit and Yolanda Vargas Dulché’s Memín Pinguín and Its Legacy in the Contemporary United States and Mexican Comic Book Industries
Kerry Soper 125 From Jive Crows in “Dumbo” to Bumbazine and “Pogo”: Walt Kelly and the Conflicted Politics Reracinating African American Types in Mid-20th Century Comics
Robert Furlong and Christophe Cassiau-Haurie 150 Comic Books, Politics, and Manipulation: The Case of Repiblik Zanimo, the First Comic Strip and Book in Creole
Grazyna Gajewsk 159 Between History and Memory – Marzi: Children Should Be Seen and Not Heard Marzena Sowa and Sylvain Savoia
Matthew M. Chew and Lu Chen 171 Media Institutional Contexts of the Emergence and Development of Xinmanhua in China
Jörn Ahrens 192 The Father’s Art of Crime: Igort’s 5 Is the Perfect Number
Marco Pellitteri 209 Comics Reading and Attitudes of Openness toward the Other: The Italian-Speaking Teenagers’ Case in South Tyrol
Iren Ozgur 248 Have You Heard the One about the Islamist Humor Magazine?
Weidan Cao 251 The Mountains and the Moon, the Willows and the Swallows: A Hybrid Semiotic Analysis of Feng Zikai’s “New Paintings for Old Poems”
Candida Rifkind 268 A Stranger in an Strange Land? Guy Delisle Redraws the Travelogue
Daniel Stein 291 The Long Shadow of Wilhelm Busch: “Max & Moritz” and German Comics
Hannah Miodrag 309 Fragmented Text: The Spatial Arrangement of Words in Comics
Christopher Eklund 328 Toward an Ethicoaesthetics of Comics: A Critical Manifesto
Muliyadi Mahamood 336 The Malaysian Humor Magazine Gila-Gila: An Appreciation
Roy Bearden-White 354 Inheriting Trauma in Chris Ware’s Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth
Philippe Gauthier 367 On “Institutionalization”: From Cinema to Comics
Marc A. Londo 376 Mr. Tap and His African-American Cartoons of the 1940s/1950s
Marcia R. Ristaino 395 Two Linked by Another, Ding Cong: Interviews with Betty McIntosh and Shen Jun
Shelley Drake Hawks 402 Ding Cong’s “True Story of Ah Q” in Art and Life
John A. Lent and Xu Ying 425 Fengjing – The Town That Claimed Ding Cong
Phillip Troutman 432 The Discourse of Comics Scholarship: A Rhetorical Analysis of Research Article Introductions
Ross Murray 445 Referencing Comics: A Comprehensive Citation Guide
Sylvain Rheault 459 Curvy Alterations in “Gaston” by Franquin
Miriam Peña-Pimentel 469 Baroque Features in Japanese Hentai
Yuko Nakamura 487 What Does the “Sky” Say? – Distinctive Characteristics of Manga and What the Sky Represents in It
B.S. Jamuna 509 Strategic Positioning and Re-presentations of Women in Indian Comics
Meena Ahmed 525 Exploring the Dimensions of Political Cartoons: A Case Study of Pakistan
Camila Figueiredo 543 Tunes Across Media: The Intermedial Transposition of Music in Watchmen
Rania M. R. Saleh 552 Making History Come Alive Through Political Cartoons
Bill Kartalopoulos 565 Taking and Making Liberties: Narratives of Comics History
Toni Masdiono 577 An Indonesian Bid for the First Graphic Novel
John A. Lent 581 In Remembrance of Five Major Comic Art Personalities
Perucho Mejia Garcia 588 Ismael Roldan Torres (1964-2009) of Colombia: A Memorial Tribute
Zheng Huagai 598 Tributes to Two Famous, Anti-Japanese War Cartoonists: Zhang Ding and Te Wei
John A. Lent 614 The Printed Word
620 Book Reviews
644 Exhibition and Media Reviews
696 Correction
697 Portfolio

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Green Lantern (2011) Trailer

The trailer for the upcoming film Green Lantern (2011) was released earlier this week and can viewed at the official site as well as file-sharing venues like YouTube. Based on the trailer, the film looks like the origin of GL has been turned into a "hero's journey" film with some comedic moments. Also, villain Hector Hammond looks suitably monstrous, and the aliens members of the GL Corps resemble their comic book originals (which is more than can be said of the recent original video Green Lantern: First Flight.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

New Book: Shazam! The Golden Age of the World's Mightiest Mortal

Now available from Abrams ComicArts (N.B. for Shazam read Captain Marvel, one would have expected the publishers to not have made such a glaring error in the copy):


Shazam! The Golden Age of the World's Mightiest Mortal
Authors: By Chip Kidd with photography by Geoff Spear
Imprint: Abrams ComicArts
ISBN: 0-8109-9596-4
EAN: 9780810995963
Availability: In Stock
Price: $35.00
Publishing Date: 12/1/2010
Trim Size: 9 x 12
Page Count: 246
Cover: Hardcover
Illustrations: 300 full-color illustrations; gatefold

About the book

Shazam made his debut in Whiz Comics in 1940, and outsold his biggest competitor, Superman, by 14 million copies a month. It wasn’t long before a variety of merchandise was licensed—secret decoders, figurines, buttons, paper rockets, tin toys, puzzles, costumes—and a fan club was created to keep up with the demand. These collectibles now sell for outrageous prices on eBay or in comic book stores and conventions. Seventy years later, an unprecedented assortment of these collectibles are gathered together by award-winning writer/designer Chip Kidd and photographer Geoff Spear. Join Kidd, Spear, and the World’s Mightiest Mortal in this first, fully authorized celebration of ephemera, artwork, and rare, one-of-a-kind toys, and recapture the magic that was Shazam!

About the authors

Chip Kidd is an award-winning graphic designer and writer, and an editor-at-large for Pantheon Books. His books on comics include Bat-Manga!, Peanuts: The Art of Charles M. Schulz, and Mythology: The DC Comics Art of Alex Ross. He lives in New York City.

Geoff Spear is an award-winning photographer whose work has appeared on numerous book covers. He lives in New York City.

European Comic Art Volumes 1.1-3.1

Contents as follows:

European Comic Art 3.1 (2010)

European Comic Art
Pages 1-1

Introduction: It was a dark and stormy night … Narration in Comics
Pages v-viii

The Monstrator, the Recitant and the Shadow of the Narrator
Pages 1-21
Author Thierry Groensteen

Narrative Techniques in Tardi's Le Der des ders and Voyage au bout de la nuit
Pages 23-36
Author Armelle Blin-Rolland

Comics and Everyday Life: from Ennui to Contemplation
Pages 37-64
Author Greice Schneider
 
Fire Escapes to Nowhere: Colin and Cilluffo's World Trade Angels
Pages 65-80
Author Lawrence R. Schehr

'C'est pas du tout ce que tu penses': Improvisational Narrative Strategies in Ruppert and Mulot's La Maison close
Pages 81-103
Author Bart Beaty

Between Writing and Image: A Scriptwriter's Way of Working
Pages 105-116
Author Benoît Peeters

Angoulême, 2010
Pages 117-118
Author Bart Beaty


European Comic Art 2.2 (Dec. 2009)

Introduction: The Nineteenth Century and Beyond
Pages v-viii

The Gourary Töpffer Manuscript of Monsieur Jabot: A Question of Authenticity.: With the Dating and Distribution of Rodolphe Töpffer's First Published Picture Story, and the World's First Modern Comic Strip
Pages 173-203
Author David Kunzle
 
Ally Sloper on Stage
Pages 205-225
Author Roger Sabin

The Conquest of Space: Evolution of Panel Arrangements and Page Layouts in Early Comics Published in Belgium (1880–1929)
Pages 227-252
Author Pascal Lefèvre
 
The Spanish Tebeo
Pages 253-276
Author Viviane Alary
 
Reviews
Pages 277-282

Notes on Contributors
Pages 283-284

Index to Volume 2
Pages 285-286


European Comic Art 2.1 (June 2009)

Introduction: Caricature
Pages v-vii

'I Must Not Draw…'
Pages 1-19
Author Plantu

Graphic Shorthand: From Caricature to Narratology in Twentieth-Century Bande dessinée and Comics
Pages 21-39
Author Harry Morgan

Early French Caricature (1795–1830) and English Influence
Pages 41-64
Author Caroline Rossiter

'From the Land Where the Word Balloons Throw Shadows': An Interview with Anke Feuchtenberger
Pages 65-82
Author Mark David Nevins

Caricaturing 'The Colonial Good Life' in French Indochina
Pages 83-108
Author Michael G. Vann

Bête et méchant: Politics, Editorial Cartoons and Bande dessinée in the French Satirical Newspaper Charlie hebdo
Pages 109-129
Author Jane Weston

Cabu Reporter
Pages 131-151
Author Tanitoc

News and Reviews
Pages 153-168

Notes on Contributors
Pages 169-172


European Comic Art 1.2 (Dec. 2008)

Editorial
Pages v-viii

North and South in Belgian Comics
Pages 111-126
Author Jan Baetens

'Is There Any Boudin on the Moon?' Depicting Cajun Ethnicity in Bec Doux et ses amis
Pages 127-144
Author Fabrice Leroy

Arthème Fayard's Magazines and the Promotion of Picture Stories 'à la française'
Pages 145-156
Author Annie Renonciat

The Silence of the Page Une trop bruyante solitude: The Graphic Novel Adaptation of Too Loud a Solitude by Bohumil Hrabal
Pages 157-174
Author Martha Kuhlman

The Frontier and the Affrontier: French-Language Algerian Comics and Cartoons Confront the Nation
Pages 175-200
Author Mark McKinney

News and Reviews
Pages 201-214

Notes on Contributors
Pages 215-216

Index to Volume 1
Pages 217-218


European Comic Art 1.1 (June 2008)

Introduction
Pages v-viii
Bande dessinée and the Cinematograph: Visual Narrative in 1895
Pages 1-20
Author Lance Rickman
De Luca and Hamlet: Thinking Outside the Box
Pages 21-36
Author Paul Gravett
Family History and Social History: Étienne Davodeau's Reportage of Reality in Les Mauvaises gens
Pages 37-56
Author Clare Tufts
Autobiographical Innovations: Edmond Baudoin's Éloge de la poussière
Pages 57-86
Author Matthew Screech
A Few Words about The System of Comics and More …
Pages 87-94
Author Thierry Groensteen
News and Reviews
Pages 95-107
Notes on Contributors
Pages 109-110

Recent Comics Journal: European Comic Art

European Comic Art from Liverpool University Press is now into its third year of publication. Here are the details about the journal from its website. I will post the contents separately.


European Comic Art
ISSN 1754-3797

Synopsis
European Comic Art is the first English-language scholarly publication devoted to the study of European-language graphic novels, comic strips, comic books and caricature. Published in association with the American Bande Dessinée Society and the International Bande Dessinée Society, European Comic Art builds on existing scholarship in French-language comic art and is able to draw on the scholarly activities undertaken by both organisations. However, our editorial board and consultative committee bring expertise on a wider European area of comic art production and the journal will emphasise coverage of work from across Europe, including Eastern Europe.

Published twice a year, European Comic Art is available in both print and online form and serves as a forum where different theoretical and critical approaches, as well as national comics traditions, can meet.

We would particularly welcome articles in these areas:

The current 'manga-isation' of the European comics scene by Asian comics
Mutual influences of French and American comics
Feminist comic art and women cartoonists
Comics without words
Hergé and the clear-line school of cartooning
Cartoonist collectives and independent publishers since 1990
Genre and the Industry
Comics and digital media
The cartoonist as reporter
Comics in their historical context
Contributions should be original and should not have been previously published in any form, including all forms of electronic publication. Contributors are required to assign copyright to Liverpool University Press, and not to publish accepted articles or book reviews on web pages before they appear in European Comic Art.

European Comic Art is hosted online by Metapress and is accessible at http://liverpool.metapress.com/content/121625/. Online access is free to existing subscribers.

Editors
Laurence Grove, University of Glasgow
Mark McKinney, Miami University, Ohio
Ann Miller, University of Leicester

Book Review Editor
Catherine Labio, University of Colorado at Boulder

Editorial Board
Bart Beaty, University of Calgary
Hugo Frey, University of Chichester
Wendy Michallat, University of Sheffield
Kees Ribbens, Nederlands Instituut voor Oorlogsdocumentatie, Amsterdam
Roger Sabin, University of the Arts, London
Matthew Screech, Manchester Metropolitan University
Clare Tufts, Duke University

Consultative Committee
Jan Baetens, Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven
Teresa Bridgeman, University of Bristol
Cécile Danehy, Wheaton College, Norton, MA
Vittorio Frigerio, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS
Fabio Gadducci, University of Pisa
Paul Gravett, author and critic
Thierry Groensteen, Editions de l'An 2, Angoulême
Michael Kelly, University of Southampton
David Kunzle, UCLA
Dominique Le Duc, University of Brighton
Pascal Lefèvre, Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven
Fabrice Leroy, University of Louisiana at Lafayette
John Lent, Temple University, Philadelphia
Anne Magnussen, University of Southern Denmark
Jean-Christophe Menu, Author and Publisher, Founder of L'Association
Pedro Pérez del Solar, University of Texas at El Paso
Murray Pratt, Nottingham Trent University
Thierry Smolderen, l'EESATI (Ecole Supérieure de l'Image), Angoulême
Joost Swarte, Artist and Graphic Designer

Editorial Correspondence
Submission to European Comic Art is via Manuscript Central at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/lup-eca

Should you require any assistance using Manuscript Central please do not hesitate to contact ScholarOne’s Manuscript Central Helpdesk. Monday through Friday, 3:00 am to 8:30 pm EST, (US Based Number): +1-434-817-2040 x 334 or by clicking the ‘Get Help Now’ link on the upper right corner of the site to search FAQs, email the team, or locate a Guide for Authors.

Any other editorial correspondence should be addressed to:

Dr Laurence Grove email: B.Grove@french.arts.gla.ac.uk

Books Review Editor
All books for review should be addressed to:

Dr Catherine Labio
Department of English
University of Colorado at Boulder
Hellems 118 - UCB 226
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Contents Journal of Graphic Novels & Comics 1.1

Here are the contents for Journal of Graphic Novels & Comics 1.1. The issue is free at the publisher's website.

Editorial
David Huxley; Joan Ormrod
Pages 1 – 4

Articles
From Iky Mo to Lord Horror: representations of Jews in British comics
Paul Gravett
Pages 5 – 16

From fan appropriation to industry re-appropriation: the sexual identity of comic superheroes
Gareth Schott
Pages 17 – 29

‘A fistful of dead roses…’. Comics as cultural resistance: Alan Moore and David Lloyd's V for Vendetta
Maggie Gray
Pages 31 – 49

The absence of black supervillains in mainstream comics
Phillip Lamarr Cunningham
Pages 51 – 62

Redrawing nationalism: Chester Brown's Louis Riel: a comic-strip biography
Andrew Lesk
Pages 63 – 81

Book Reviews
Che: a graphic biography, by Sid Jacobson and Ernie Colón
New York, Hill and Wang, 2009, 128pp., US$22 (hardback), ISBN 978-0-8090-9492-9
James Scorer
Pages 83 – 85

Of comics and men: a cultural history of American comic books, by Jean-Paul Gabilliet
translated by Bart Beaty and Nick Nguyen, Jackson, University Press of Mississippi, 2010, xx + 390 pp., US$55.00 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-60473-267-2
Tony Venezia
Pages 85 – 88

Art Spiegelman: conversations, edited by Joseph Witek
Jackson, University Press of Mississippi, 2007, xxiii + 318 pp., US$50 (hardback), US$20 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-934110-12-6
Ranen Omer-Sherman
Pages 88 – 90

New Journal: Journal of Graphic Novels & Comics

The Taylor & Francis Group has recently launched its own biannual comics-related journal, Journal of Graphic Novels & Comics. The first issue is available free online, and calls for papers for future issues ("Gender and Superheroes" and "Audiences and Readership") are also online.

Details on the journal are as follows:

The Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics is a peer reviewed journal covering all aspects of the graphic novel, comic strip and comic book, with the emphasis on comics in their cultural, institutional and creative contexts. Its scope is international, covering not only English language comics but also worldwide comic culture. The journal reflects interdisciplinary research in comics and aims to establish a dialogue between academics, historians, theoreticians and practitioners of comics.  It therefore examines the production and consumption of comics within the contexts of culture: art, cinema, television and new media technologies.

The journal will include all forms of 'sequential imagery' including precursors of the comic but the main emphasis will be on twentieth and twenty-first century examples, reflecting the increasing interest in the modern forms of the comic, its production and cultural consumption.

Editorial Biographies

David Huxley is a Senior Lecturer on the Film and Media Studies BA Hons at Manchester Metropolitan University. He has written widely on comics, including, ‘Naked Aggression: Comic Books and the Vietnam War' in J Walsh (ed) Tell MeLies About Vietnam, Open University Press, 1988, ‘Viz: Class, Gender and Sexuality' in S Wagg (ed) Because I Tell a Joke or Two, Routledge, 1997, and Nasty Tales: Drugs, Sex and Rock'n'Roll in British Underground Comics, Critical Vision Books, 2000. He has also written and drawn for a wide range of comics, including Ally Sloper (1976), Comic Tales (1981), Heavy Metal (1982), Pssst (1982) and Oink (1987-1988).

Joan Ormrod is a Senior Lecturer in Film and Media Studies BA Hons at Manchester Metropolitan University, teaching a range of units such as Graphic Novels and Comics, Fantasy in Popular Culture and Science Fiction. Her publications and conference presentations reflect her research interests in subcultural audiences, comics and cult films.  In 2009 she co-edited a book, On the Edge: Leisure, Consumption and the Representation of Adventure Sports.  She has published articles on cult films in Scope, and surfing subcultures in History of Sport, presented papers at comics conferences and co-hosted a conference on comics with David Huxley in September 2007.  In a previous life she published a number of scripts with Marvel UK.


Editorial Board

EDITORS
David Huxley, Faculty of Art & Design, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
Joan Ormrod, Faculty of Art & Design, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

CONSULTING EDITOR
Roger Sabin, Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, University of the Arts London, UK

BOOK REVIEW EDITOR
Rob Weiner
Associate Humanities Librarian
Texas Tech University Libraries
Box 40002
Lubbock
Texas 79403-0002
USA

EDITORIAL BOARD
Jörn Ahrens, Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen, Germany
Bart Beaty, Calgary University, Canada
Jaqueline Berndt, Kyoto Seika University , Japan
Will Brooker, Kingston University, UK
Scott Bukatman, Stanford University, USA
Peter Coogan, Washington University, USA
Paul Dawson, Manchester University, UK
Melany Gibson, University of Northumbria , UK
Paul Gravett, Author, UK
Charles Hatfield, California State University, USA
Pascal Lefevre, Belgium
Andrew Lesk, University of Toronto, Canada
Angela Ndalianis, University of Melbourne, Australia
Lance Rickman, Essex University, UK
Derek Royal, Western Illinois University, USA
Gareth Schott, Waikato University, New Zealand
Mathew Screech, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
Marni Stanley, Vancouver University, Canada
Fredrik Strömberg, Malmo University, Sweden
Joseph Witek, Stetson University, Florida, USA
Robert G. Weiner, Texas Tech University, USA

IJOCA 12.2-3

The latest issue of The International Journal of Comic Art arrived this weekend. At 711 pages, this issue is double-sized. The complete contents do not yet appear at the journal's website, but the following articles should be of general interest:

Phillip Troutman, "The Discourse of Comics Scholarship: A Rhetorical Analysis of Research Article Introductions."

Ross Murray, "Referencing Comics: A Comprehensive Citation Guide."

Bill Kartalopoulos, "Taking and Making Liberties: Narratives of Comics History."

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

3 New/Recent Books from McFarland

Comics as a Nexus of Cultures: Essays on the Interplay of Media, Disciplines and International Perspectives
Edited by Mark Berninger Jochen Ecke and Gideon Haberkorn
Series Editors Donald E. Palumbo and C.W. Sullivan III
ISBN 978-0-7864-3987-4
29 photos, notes, filmographies, bibliographies, index
308pp. softcover 2010
Price: $39.95


Description
These essays from various critical disciplines examine how comic books and graphic narratives move between various media, while merging youth and adult cultures and popular and high art. The articles feature international perspectives on comics and graphic novels published in the U.S., Canada, Great Britain, Portugal, Germany, Turkey, India, and Japan. Topics range from film adaptation, to journalism in comics, to the current manga boom.


Table of Contents

Introduction      1

INTERMEDIAL
1. Spatializing the Movie Screen: How Mainstream Cinema Is Catching Up on the Formal Potentialities of the Comic Book Page      7
Jochen Ecke
2. The Marvel Universe on Screen: A New Wave of Superhero Movies?      21
Andreas Rauscher
3. From Trauma Victim to Terrorist: Redefining Superheroes in Post–9/11 Hollywood      33
Dan A. Hassler-Forest
4. “Picture This”: Disease and Autobiographic Narration in the Graphic Novels of David B and Julie Doucet      45
Jonas Engelmann
5. Novel-Based Comics      60
Paul Ferstl
6. In the Art of the Beholder: Comics as Political Journalism      70
Dirk Vanderbeke

INTERNATIONAL
7. The Carrefour of Practice: Québec BD in Transition      85
Michel Hardy-Vallée
8. The Use of Allusion in Apitz and Kunkel’s Karl Comics      99
Sandra Martina Schwab
9. Cultural Specifics of a Scottish Comic: Oor Wullie      108
Anne Hoyer
10. Memento Mori: A Portuguese Style of Melancholy      116
Mario Gomes and Jan Peuckert
11. Otherness and the European as Villain and Antihero in American Comics      127
Georg Drennig
12. 2000AD: Understanding the “British Invasion” of American Comics      140
Ben Little
13. Whatever Happened to All the Heroes? British Perspectives on Superheroes      153
Karin Kukkonen and Anja Müller-Wood
14. A Cornerstone of Turkish Fantastic Films: From Flash Gordon to Baytekin      164
Meral Özç nar
15. From Capes to Snakes: The Indianization of the American Superhero      175
Suchitra Mathur
16. The Roving Eye Meets Traveling Pictures: The Field of Vision and the Global Rise of Adult Manga      187
Holger Briel
17. Kawaii vs. Rorikon: The Reinvention of the Term Lolita in Modern Japanese Manga      211
Dinah Zank
18. Mangascape Germany: Comics as Intercultural Neutral Ground      223
Paul M. Malone

INTERDISCIPLINARY
19. Workshop I: Toward a Toolbox of Comics Studies      237
Karin Kukkonen and Gideon Haberkorn
20. Workshop II: Comics in School      245
Mark Berninger
21. Workshop III: Teaching Comics and Literary Studies—Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess’ “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”      253
Mark Berninger
22. Workshop IV: Teaching Comics and Film Studies—Ang Lee’s The Hulk (USA 2003)      265
Andreas Rauscher
23. Comic Linguistics: Comics and Cartoons in Academic Teaching      274
Christina Sanchez

About the Contributors      283
Index      287


About the Authors
Mark Berninger is a lecturer on British Studies in the department of English and Linguistics at Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat in Mainz, Germany. He has published widely on contemporary drama. Research associate Jochen Ecke is an accomplished film critic and comic expert. Gideon Haberkorn is in the department of English and Linguistics British Studies at Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat in Mainz, Germany. Donald E. Palumbo is a professor of English at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. He lives in Greenville. C.W. Sullivan III is in the English department at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina.


Edited by Robert G. Weiner 
Forewords by Elizabeth Figa and Derek Parker Royal; Afterword by Stephen Weiner
ISBN 978-0-7864-4302-4 
12 illustrations, 16 charts, notes, bibliographies, index
288pp. softcover (7 x 10) 2010
Price: $45.00

Description
To say that graphic novels, comics, and other forms of sequential art have become a major part of popular culture and academia would be a vast understatement. Now an established component of library and archive collections across the globe, graphic novels are proving to be one of the last kinds of print publications actually gaining in popularity.

Full of practical advice and innovative ideas for librarians, educators, and archivists, this book provides a wide-reaching look at how graphic novels and comics can be used to their full advantage in educational settings. Topics include the historically tenuous relationship between comics and librarians; the aesthetic value of sequential art; the use of graphic novels in library outreach services; collection evaluations for both American and Canadian libraries; cataloging tips and tricks; and the swiftly growing realm of webcomics.


Table of Contents

Acknowledgments      vii
Foreword by Elizabeth Figa      1
Foreword by Derek Parker Royal      3
Introduction (Robert G. Weiner)      5

Part One: History
1. A Librarian’s Guide to the History of Graphic Novels
ALICIA HOLSTON      9
2. Manga in Japanese Libraries: A Historical Overview
DAVID HOPKINS      17
3. How Librarians Learned to Love the Graphic Novel
AMY KISTE NYBERG      26

Part Two: School Libraries
4. The Development of a School Library Graphic Novel Collection
HEIDI K. HAMMOND      41
5. Balancing Popular High-Circulation Works with Works of Merit in Elementary School Library Collections
DIANA P. MALISZEWSKI      47

Part Three: Public Libraries
6. Creative Shelving: Placement in Library Collections
AMY HARTMAN      52
7. Graphic Novels at Los Angeles Public
RACHEL KITZMANN      63
8. Teen-Led Revamp
ERICA SEGRAVES      68

Part Four: Academic Libraries
9. Selection and Popular Culture in Large Academic Libraries: Taking the Temperature of Your Research Community
CHARLOTTE CUBBAGE      72
10. Maus Goes to College: Graphic Novels on Reserve at an Academic Library
ANNE-MARIE DAVIS      81
11. The Library After Dark: The Promotion of Collections and Services
GWEN EVANS      87
12. So Many Options, So Little Money: Building a Selective Collection for the Academic Library
LIORAH ANNE GOLOMB      101
13. The Spinner Rack in the Big Red and Ivory Tower: Establishing a Comics and Graphic Novels Collection at the University of
Nebraska–Lincoln
RICHARD GRAHAM      111
14. Comic Art Collection at the Michigan State University Libraries
RANDALL W. SCOTT      123
15. Interview with Randall W. Scott
NICHOLAS YANES AND ROBERT G. WEINER      127

Part Five: State Libraries/Archives
16. The Perils of Doctor Strange: Preserving Pennsylvania-Centered Comics at the State Library of Pennsylvania
WILLIAM T. FEE      131

Part Six: Audiences
17. Graphic Novels and the Untapped Audience
RUTH BOYER      141
18. Comic Relief in Libraries: Motivating Male Adolescent Readers
KAREN GAVIGAN      145
19. “Forty-one-year-old female academics aren’t supposed to like comics!” The Value of Comic Books to Adult Readers
SARAH ZIOLKOWSKA AND VIVIAN HOWARD      154
20. Graphics Let Teens OWN the Library
CHRISTIAN ZABRISKIE      167

Part Seven: Nomenclature and Aesthetics
21. The Only Thing Graphic Is Your Mind: Reconstructing the Reference Librarian’s View of the Genre
AMANDA STEGALL-ARMOUR      177
22. What’s in a Name: Nomenclature and Libraries
FRANCISCA GOLDSMITH      185
23. The Ontology of Art and What Libraries Should Buy
RUTH TALLMAN AND JASON SOUTHWORTH      192

Part Eight: Meta-Comics/Webcomics
24. Meta-Comics and Libraries: Should Libraries Buy Them?
ADAM J. NOBLE      202
25. Webcomics and Libraries
AMY THORNE      209

Part Nine: Cataloging
26. Cataloging and Problems with Dewey: Creativity, Collaboration and Compromise
LAUREL TARULLI      213
27. An Example of an In-House Cataloging System
ROBERT G. WEINER      222

Part Ten: Evaluation of Collections
28. Drawing Comics into Canadian Libraries
RACHEL COLLINS      226
29. Graphic Novel Holdings in Academic Libraries
ERIC WERTHMANN      242

Afterword by Stephen Weiner      260
About the Contributors      263
Index      267

About the Author
Robert G. Weiner is humanities librarian at Texas Tech University. His works have been published in the Journal of Popular Culture, Public Library Quarterly, Journal of American Culture, International Journal of Comic Art and Popular Music and Society. He lives in Lubbock, Texas.



Watchmen as Literature: A Critical Study of the Graphic Novel
Sara J. Van Ness
ISBN 978-0-7864-4475-5
15 illustrations, notes, bibliography, index
219pp. softcover 2010
Price: $35.00


Description
Watchmen has been hailed as the quintessential graphic novel and has spawned a body of literary criticism since its 1986 initial appearance in installments. This work explores the graphic novel’s reception in both popular and scholarly arenas and how the conceptual relationship between images and words affects the reading experience. Other topics include heroism as a stereotype, the hero’s journey, the role of the narrator, and the way in which the graphic layout manipulates the reader’s perception of time and space.


Table of Contents

Acknowledgments      v
Preface      1

1. Invading the Ivory Tower      5
2. I^^@ge$ & Wo(r)d$      23
3. A Language All Its Own      46
4. The Watchmen      61
5. Parallel Histories      77
6. Hooded Honor      101
7. Not So Black and White      120
8. Faceless Heroes      145
9. Measuring Up: Zack Snyder’s Watchmen      171

Closing Remarks      190
Chapter Notes      191
Works Cited      197
Selected Annotated Bibliography of Watchmen Scholarship and Related Resources      203
Index      209


About the Author
Sara J. Van Ness is a graduate student at Monmouth University in New Jersey.

New film: 30 Days of Night: Dark Days

30 Days of Night: Dark Days, the original video sequel to the feature film 30 Days of Night, is set to be released next Tuesday, 5 Oct. The film is based on the graphic novel of the same title that continues the story of Stella Olemaun, a survivor of a vampire assault on the town of Barrow, Alaska. In Dark Days, Stella tells her story to the world and joins forces with a band of vampire hunters based in Los Angeles as they seek out Lilith, the vampire queen.



Also coming soon to DVD: Iron Man 2, Jonah Hex, Scott Pilgrim, Batman/Superman: Apocalypse, and Superman/Shazam: The Return of Black Adam.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

New/recent from Continuum

From Continuum's website:


Looking for Calvin and Hobbes: The Unconventional Story of Bill Watterson and his Revolutionary Comic Strip
by Nevin Martell


Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 19 Aug 2010
ISBN: 9781441106858
272 Pages, paperback
$15.95


Description:
For ten years, Calvin and Hobbes was one the world's most beloved comic strips. And then, on the last day of 1995, the strip ended. Its mercurial and reclusive creator, Bill Watterson, not only finished the strip but withdrew entirely from public life.
In Looking for Calvin and Hobbes, Nevin Martell sets out on a very personal odyssey to understand the life and career of the intensely private man behind Calvin and Hobbes. Martell talks to a wide range of artists and writers (including Dave Barry, Harvey Pekar, and Brad Bird) as well as some of Watterson’s closest friends and professional colleagues, and along the way reflects upon the nature of his own fandom and on the extraordinary legacy that Watterson left behind. This is as close as we're ever likely to get to one of America's most ingenious and intriguing figures - and it’s the fascinating story of an intrepid author’s search for him, too.


Table of Contents:

Prologue

1. Working on a Dream

2. Making Friends

3. Standing on the Shoulders of Giants

4. A Boy And His Tiger

5. Calvin in Wonderland

6. Welcome to the Machine

7. This is How You Disappear

8. Under the Influence

9. There and Back Again

10. The Future is Always Uncertain

Epilogue


Nevin Martell is the author of Standing Small: A Celebration of 30 Years of the LEGO Minifigure, Dave Matthews Band: Music for the People and Beck: The Art of Mutation. He is a Contributing Editor at Filter magazine and his music journalism has appeared in Paste, Giant, Men’s Health, High Times, and Flaunt, as well as online at RollingStone.com. Currently, he lives with his wife in Washington, DC, where he writes full time. You can find him online at www.nevinmartell.com.



Secret Identity Crisis: Comic Books and the Unmasking of Cold War America
by Matthew J. Costello

Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 01 Mar 2009
ISBN: 9780826429988
288 Pages, paperback
$26.95


Description:
   What Cold War-era superheroes reveal about American society and foreign policy
   Physicist Bruce Banner, caught in the nuclear explosion of his experimental gamma bomb, is transformed into the rampaging green monster, the Hulk. High school student Peter Parker, bitten by an irradiated spider, gains its powers and becomes Spiderman. Reed Richards and his friends are caught in a belt of cosmic radiation while orbiting the Earth in a spacecraft and are transformed into the Fantastic Four. While Stan Lee suggests he clung to the hackneyed idea of radioactivity in creating Marvel’s stable of superheroes because of his limited imagination, radiation and the bomb are nonetheless the big bang that spawned the Marvel universe.
   The Marvel superheroes that came to dominate the comic book industry for most of the last five decades were born under the mushroom cloud of potential nuclear war that was a cornerstone of the four-decade bipolar division of the world between the US and USSR. These stories were consciously set in this world and reflect the changing culture of cold War (and post-cold War) America. Like other forms of popular entertainment, comic books tend to be very receptive to cultural trends, reflect them, comment on them, and sometimes inaugurate them.
   Secret Identity Crisis follows the trajectory of the breakdown of the cold War consensus after 1960 through the lens of superhero comic books. Those developed by Marvel, because of their conscious setting in the contemporary world, and because of attempts to maintain a continuous story line across and within books, constitute a system of signs that reflect, comment upon, and interact with the American political economy. This groundbreaking new study focuses on a handful of titles and signs that specifically involve political economic codes, including Captain America, The Invincible Iron Man, Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD, The Incredible Hulk to reveal how the American self was transformed and/or reproduced during the late Cold War and after.


Table of Contents:

Introduction

1. The Cold War and the Forging of the Liberal Consensus

2. 1961-68: The Enemy Without

3. 1969-76: The Enemy Within

4. 1977-85: Retreat into Privacy

5. 1986-96: Betrayal in the Mirror

6. 1996-2007: The New World Order

7. Civil War and the Death of Captain America

Bibliography


Matthew J. Costello, PhD, is Professor of Political Science at Saint Xavier University, Chicago.



Disguised as Clark Kent: Jews, Comics, and the Creation of the Superhero
by Danny Fingeroth
foreword by Stan Lee


Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 01 Nov 2008
ISBN: 9780826430144
216 Pages, paperback
$19.95


Description:
   In Disguised as Clark Kent, Danny Fingeroth--a long-time executive in the comics business who wrote and edited Spider-Man as well as other famous lines for Marvel--reflects on the phenomenon of the heavily Jewish elements that, consciously or not, went into the creation of the superhero.
   Centering on questions of Jewish identity, which is historically about the push and pull toward and away from that very identity, Disguised as Clark Kent brings valuable insight into the fantasies that fuel our imaginations and entertainment industry, as well as many significant and often hidden aspects of our society.

Table of Contents: [NB These do not match the published version]

Foreword by Stan Lee

Introduction: My Country ‘tis of Me

Chapter 1: Coming to Terms: What’s So Jewish About Superheroes, Anyway?

Chapter 2: Superhero Genesis: Who He Is and How He Came to Be

Chapter 3: A Stranger among Us: The Birth of Superman

Chapter 4: A Great Multitude: Batman and Beyond

Chapter 5: Doctor of Doom: Frederic Wertham’s Superhero Complex

Chapter 6: Rebuilding the Temple: The Silver Age of Comics

Chapter 7: Why Are These Heroes Different?: The Marvel Revolution

Chapter 8: Love Thy Neighbor as Thyself: The X-Men and the ‘70s

Chapter 9: As a Matter of Fact, I Am Jewish: The Modern Age

Chapter 10: Unto the Next Generation: The Jewish Superhero Future

Bibliography

Index

As former Group Editor of Marvel Comics's Spider-Man line, Danny Fingeroth became intimately familiar with the key elements of superhero mythology. He is exceptionally well versed in just what it takes to breathe life into these characters. Fingeroth is currently the creator and editor of Write Now magazine. He lives in New York City with his wife, sons, and 30,000 comic books.



Graven Images: Religion in Comic Books & Graphic Novels
edited by A. David Lewis
edited by Christine Hoff Kraemer


Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 14 Oct 2010
ISBN: 9780826430267
336 Pages, paperback
$34.95


Description: 
   Comic books have increasingly become a vehicle for serious social commentary and, specifically, for innovative religious thought. Practitioners of both traditional religions and new religious movements have begun to employ comics as a missionary tool, while humanists and religious progressives use comics’ unique fusion of text and image to criticize traditional theologies and to offer alternatives. Addressing the increasing fervor with which the public has come to view comics as an art form and Americans' fraught but passionate relationship with religion, Graven Images explores with real insight the roles of religion in comic books and graphic novels.
   In essays by scholars and comics creators, Graven Images observes the frequency with which religious material—in devout, educational, satirical, or critical contexts—occurs in both independent and mainstream comics. Contributors identify the unique advantages of the comics medium for religious messages; analyze how comics communicate such messages; place the religious messages contained in comics books in appropriate cultural, social, and historical frameworks; and articulate the significance of the innovative theologies being developed in comics.

Table of Contents: 

Foreword: Looking for God in the Gutter
Douglas Rushkoff (Creator, Testament; The New School)

Introduction
Christine Hoff Kraemer (Cherry Hill Seminary) and A. David Lewis (Boston University), editors

NEW INTERPRETATIONS

The Devil’s Reading: Revenge and Revelation in American Comics
Aaron Ricker Parks (McGill University)

London (& the Mind) as Sacred-Desecrated Place in Alan Moore’s From Hell
Emily Taylor Merriman (San Francisco State University)

Drawing Contracts: Will Eisner’s Legacy
Laurence Roth (Susquehanna University)

Catholic American Citizenship: Prescriptions for Children from Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact (1946-1963)
Anne Blankenship (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

Gold Plates, Inked Pages: The Authority of the Graphic Novel
G. St. John Stott (Arab American University, Jenin)

Comics and Religion: Theoretical Connections
Darby Orcutt (North Carolina State University)

Killing the Graven God: Visual Representations of the Divine in Comics
Andrew Tripp (Boston University)

Echoes of Eternity: Hindu Reincarnation Motifs in Superhero Comic Books
Saurav Mohapatra (Creator, India Authentic)

The Christianizing of Animism in Manga and Anime: American Translations of Hayao Miyazaki’s Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
Eriko Ogihara-Schuck (Dortmund University of Technology)

RESPONSE & REBELLION

On Preacher (Or, the Death of God in Pictures)
Mike Grimshaw, University of Canterbury

Superman Graveside: Superhero Salvation beyond Jesus
A. David Lewis (Creator, The Lone and Level Sands)

“The Apocalypse of Adolescence”: Use of the Bildungsroman and Superheroic Tropes in Mark Millar & Peter Gross’s Chosen
Julia Round (Bournemouth University)

From God Nose to God’s Bosom, Or How God (and Jack Jackson) Began Underground Comics
Clay Kinchen Smith (Santa Fe College)

A Hesitant Embrace: Comic Books and Evangelicals
Kate Netzler (Independent Scholar)

Narrative and Pictorial Dualism in Persepolis and the Emergence of Complexity
Kerr Houston, (Maryland Institute College of Art)

POSTMODERN RELIGIOSITY
Machina Ex Deus: Perennialism in Comics
G. Willow Wilson (Creator, Cairo)

Conversion to Narrative: Magic as Religious Language in Grant Morrison’s Invisibles
Megan Goodwin (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

“The Magic Circus of the Mind”: Alan Moore’s Promethea and the Transformation of Consciousness through Comics
Christine Hoff Kraemer (Cherry Hill Seminary) and J. Lawton Winslade (DePaul University)

Religion and Artesia / Religion in Artesia
Mark Smylie (Creator, Artesia)

Present Gods, Absent Believers in Sandman
Emily Ronald (Boston University)

Tell Tale Visions: The Erotic Theology of Craig Thompson’s Blankets
Steve Jungkeit (Yale University)

Selected Bibliography

Appendices


A. David Lewis is a national lecturer in Comics Studies, an award-winning graphic novelist, and a PhD candidate in Religion and Literature at Boston University.

Christine Hoff Kraemer holds a PhD in Religion and Literature from Boston University and is Department Chair of Nature, Deity, and Inspiration at Cherry Hill Seminary, South Carolina.



Comics and the City: Urban Space in Print, Picture and Sequence
edited by Jörn Ahrens
edited by Arno Meteling

Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 11 Mar 2010
ISBN: 9780826440198
288 Pages, paperback
$24.95

Description:

   Comics emerged parallel to, and in several ways intertwined with, the development of modern urban mass societies at the turn of the 20th century. On the one hand, urban topoi, self-portrayals, forms of urban cultural memories, and variant readings of the city (strolling, advertising, architecture, detective stories, mass phenomena, street life, etc.) are all incorporated into comics. On the other hand, comics have unique abilities to capture urban space and city life because of their hybrid nature, consisting of words, pictures, and sequences. These formal aspects of comics are also to be found within the cityscape itself: one can see the influence of comic book aesthetics all around us today.
   With chapters on the very earliest comic strips, and on artists as diverse as Alan Moore, Carl Barks, Will Eisner and Jacques Tardi, Comics and the City is an important new collection of international scholarship that will help to define the field for many years to come.

Table of Contents:

Jörn Ahrens and Arno Meteling: Introduction


I. History, Comics, and the City

1. Jens Balzer: “Hully Gee, I’m a Hieroglyphe” – Mobilizing the Gaze and the Invention of Comics in New York City, 1895

2. Ole Frahm: Every Window Tells a Story: Remarks on the Urbanity of Early Comic Strips

3. Anthony Enns: The City as Archive in Jason Lutes’ Berlin


II. Retrofuturistic and Nostalgic Cities

4. Henry Jenkins: “The Tomorrow that Never Was” – Retrofuturism in the Comics of Dean Motter

5. Stefanie Diekmann: Remembrance of Things to Come: François Schuiten and Benoît Peeters’ Cities of the Fantastic

6. Michael Cuntz: Paris au pluriel: Depictions of the French Capital in Jacques Tardi’s Comic Book Writing


III. Superhero Cities

7. William Uricchio: The Batman’s Gotham City™: Story, Ideology, Performance

8. Arno Meteling: A Tale of Two Cities: Politics, and Superheroics in Starman and Ex Machina

9. Anthony Lioi: The Radiant City: New York as Ecotopia in Promethea, Book V

10. Jason Bainbridge: “I am New York” – Spider-Man, New York City, and the Marvel Universe


IV. Locations of Crime

11. Greg M. Smith: Will Eisner, Vaudevillian of the Cityscape

12. Björn Quiring: “A Fiction That We Must Inhabit” – Sense Production in Urban Spaces According to Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell’s From Hell

13. Jörn Ahrens: The Ordinary Urban: 100 Bullets and the Clichés of Mass Culture


V. The City-Comic as a Mode of Reflection

14. André Suhr: Seeing the City through a Frame: Marc-Antoine Mathieu’s Acquefacques-Comics

15. Andreas Platthaus: Calisota or Bust: Duckburg vs. Entenhausen in the Comics of Carl Barks

16. Thomas Becker: Enki Bilal’s Woman Trap: Reflections on Authorship under the Shifting Boundaries between Order and Terror in the Cities



Jörn Ahrens teaches cultural sociology at Giessen University, Germany.

Arno Meteling teaches literature at the Westfalian Wilhelms-University Muenster in Germany.


by Randy Duncan
by Matthew J. Smith

Imprint: Continuum
Pub. date: 01 Jul 2009
ISBN: 9780826429360
360 Pages, paperback
$24.95 

Description:

A comprehensive introduction to the comic arts
From the introduction by Paul Levitz
“If ever there was a medium characterized by its unexamined self-expression, it’s comics. For decades after the medium’s birth, it was free of organized critical analysis, its creators generally disinclined to self-analysis or formal documentation. The average reader didn’t know who created the comics, how or why . . . and except for a uniquely destructive period during America’s witch-hunting of the 1950s, didn’t seem to care. As the medium has matured, however, and the creativity of comics began to touch the mainstream of popular culture in many ways, curiosity followed, leading to journalism and eventually, scholarship, and so here we are.”

   The Power of Comics is the first introductory textbook for comic art studies courses. Lending a broader understanding of the medium and its communication potential, it provides students with a coherent and comprehensive explanation of comic books and graphic novels, including coverage of their history and their communication techniques, research into their meanings and effects and an overview of industry practices and fan culture.
   Co-authors Randy Duncan and Matthew J. Smith draw on their own years of experience teaching comics studies courses and the scholarly literature across several disciplines to create a text with the following features:

• Discussion questions for each chapter

• Activities to engage readers

• Recommended reading suggestions

• Over 150 illustrations

• Bibliography

• Glossary

   The Power of Comics deals exclusively with comic books and graphic novels. One reason for this focus is that no one text can hope to do justice to both strips and books; there is simply too much to cover. Preference is given to comic books because in their longer form, the graphic novel, they have the greatest potential for depth and complexity of expression. As comic strips shrink in size and become more inane in content, comic books are becoming a serious art form.

Table of Contents:

Preface

Introduction

Chapter 1: Defining Comic Books as a Medium

Chapter 2: History of Comic Books, Part 1: Developing a Medium

Chapter 3: History of Comic Books, Part 2: The Maturation of the Medium

Chapter 4: The Comic Book Industry

Chapter 5: The Comic Book Creators

Chapter 6: Creating the Story

Chapter 7: Experiencing the Story

Chapter 8: The Comic Book Readers

Chapter 9: Comic Book Genres: Classifying Comics

Chapter 10: Comic Book Genres: The Superhero Genre

Chapter 11: Comic Books and Ideology

Chapter 12: Researching Comic Books

Chapter 13: Comics Culture Around the World

Glossary

Bibliography


Dr. Randy Duncan is a co-founder the Comic Arts Conference, the nation’s first annual academic conference devoted solely to the study of comics. He also wrote the entries on Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Will Eisner and other comics-related topics for the St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture.

Dr. Matthew J. Smith is associate professor and chair of Communication at Wittenberg University where he regularly teaches comics arts courses. In 2009, Wittenberg's Alumni Association recognized him with its Distinguished Teaching Award.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

CFP: Comics Get Medieval 2011 (12/1/10; PCA 4/20-23/11 San Antonio)

THE COMICS GET MEDIEVAL 2011: 
A CELEBRATION IN ANTICIPATION OF THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF PRINCE VALIANT
CALL FOR PAPERS (PCA: SAN ANTONIO, TX 4/20-23/11)
SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE COMICS & COMIC ART AREA
ORGANIZED BY MICHAEL A. TORREGROSSA AND JASON TONDRO 
PROPOSALS DUE TO ORGANIZERS BY 1 DECEMBER 2010

Celebrating our sixth year in 2011, proposals are now being considered for inclusion at “The Comics Get Medieval 2011,” a series of panels and roundtables sponsored by the Society for the Study of Popular Culture and the Middle Ages and to be hosted by the Comics & Comic Art Area of the Popular Culture Association (PCA) for the 2011 Joint Conference of the National Popular Culture and American Culture Associations to be held from 20-23 April 2011 at the San Antonio Marriott Rivercenter & Riverwalk Hotels, 101 Bowie Street , San Antonio,TX 78205.

The goal of these sessions is to foster communication between medievalists, comics scholars, and specialists in popular culture studies in general.  The organizers define “medieval comics” as any aspect of the comics medium (panel cartoons, comic strips, comics books, comics albums, band dessinée, graphic novels, manga, webcomics, comics to film/film to comics, etc.) that feature medieval themes either in stories set during the Middle Ages or in stories presenting some element of the medieval in the post-medieval era.  We are also interested in papers looking at medieval comics from a pedagogical perspective.


Completed papers should be delivered in 15-20 minutes (depending on the number of presenters). All proposals will also be considered for inclusion in an essay collection to be edited by the panel organizers beginning in late 2011.  (Individuals only interested in submitting for the collection should also send proposals by 1 December 2010 deadline and indicate their preference in the email.)

In addition, a select list of potential topics and a bibliographic guide to medieval comics will appear as part of THE MEDIEVAL COMICS PROJECT web site available at and THE ARTHUR OF THE COMICS website available at , both organized by the Society for the Study of Popular Culture and the Middle Ages.


No later that 1 December 2010, interested individuals (who must be members of PCA or ACA or join for 2011) should submit full contact information (name, address, phone/cell, and email), titles, and abstracts of 300-500 words to the sessions’ organizers, who will then forward them to area chair. Address all inquiries and proposals to the organizers at the following address:  and include “Comics Get Medieval 2011” in the subject line.