The Cambridge History of the Graphic Novel
Herausgeber: Baetens, Jan; Tabachnick, Stephen E.; Frey, Hugo
The Cambridge History of the Graphic Novel
Herausgeber: Baetens, Jan; Tabachnick, Stephen E.; Frey, Hugo
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The Cambridge History of the Graphic Novel provides the complete history of the graphic novel from its origins in the nineteenth century to its rise and startling success in the twentieth and twenty-first century. It includes original discussion on the current state of the graphic novel and analyzes how American, European, Middle Eastern, and Japanese renditions have shaped the field. Thirty-five leading scholars and historians unpack both forgotten trajectories as well as the famous key episodes, and explain how comics transitioned from being marketed as children's entertainment. Essays…mehr
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The Cambridge History of the Graphic Novel provides the complete history of the graphic novel from its origins in the nineteenth century to its rise and startling success in the twentieth and twenty-first century. It includes original discussion on the current state of the graphic novel and analyzes how American, European, Middle Eastern, and Japanese renditions have shaped the field. Thirty-five leading scholars and historians unpack both forgotten trajectories as well as the famous key episodes, and explain how comics transitioned from being marketed as children's entertainment. Essays address the masters of the form, including Art Spiegelman, Alan Moore, and Marjane Satrapi, and reflect on their publishing history as well as their social and political effects. This ambitious history offers an extensive, detailed and expansive scholarly account of the graphic novel, and will be a key resource for scholars and students.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 690
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. April 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 982g
- ISBN-13: 9781316622209
- ISBN-10: 1316622207
- Artikelnr.: 62923025
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 690
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. April 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 982g
- ISBN-13: 9781316622209
- ISBN-10: 1316622207
- Artikelnr.: 62923025
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
1. Introduction Jan Baetens, Hugo Frey and Stephen E. Tabachnick; Part I:
2. The origins of adult graphic narratives: graphic literature and the
novel, from Laurence Sterne to Gustave Doré (1760-1851) Denis Mellier; 3.
Long-length serials in the Golden Age of comic strips: production and
reception Daniel Stein and Lukas Etter; 4. Long length wordless books:
Frans Masereel, Milt Gross, Lynd Ward, and beyond Barbara Postema; 5. The
postwar 'drawn novel' Jan Baetens; 6. Harvey Kurtzman and the influence of
Mad magazine Dan Byrne-Smith; 7. When realism met romance: the negative
zone of Marvel's Silver Age Christopher Pizzino; 8. Beat-era literature and
the graphic novel Hugo Frey; 9. Henry Darger, comics and the graphic novel:
contexts and appropriations Gavin Parkinson; 10. Underground comix and the
invention of autobiography, history and reportage Jean-Paul Gabilliet; 11.
Jules Feiffer - creative and intellectual ally of the graphic novel (and of
other critical/editorial voices) Paul Williams; Part II: 12. Will Eisner
and the making of a contract with God Michael A. Chaney; 13. Art
Spiegelman's autobiographical practice from Maus to MetaMaus Erin
McGlothlin; 14. Alan Moore: the making of a graphic novelist Christopher
Murray; 15. No future: punk and the underground graphic novel Benjamin
Noys; 16. European literary and genre fiction: the (À Suivre) magazine and
the 'adventure' and 'science fiction' traditions (Pratt, Tardi, Moebius)
Fabrice Leroy; 17. 'A word to you feminist women': the parallel legacies of
feminism and underground comics Susan Kirtley; 18. The secret origins of
LBGTQ graphic novels Justin Hall; 19. US creators of color and the
post-underground graphic narrative renaissance Frederick Luis Aldama; 20.
The influence of Manga on the graphic novel Simon Grennan; 21. Sandman, the
ephemeral, and the permanent Joe Sutliff Sanders; 22. 'To elevate every
experience into something artistic and exciting': Daniel Clowes's Ghost
World Ken Parille; 23. From an informed fan culture to an academic field
Randy Duncan and Matthew J. Smith; Part III. 24. Joe Sacco, graphic
novelist as political journalist Ann Miller; 25. The discovery of Marjane
Satrapi and the translation of works from and about the Middle East Chris
Reyns and Houssem Lazreg; 26. Chris Oliveros, drawn and quarterly, and the
expanded definition of the graphic novel Bart Beaty; 27. The Jewish graphic
novel Stephen E. Tabachnick; 28. Crime genre fiction in the graphic novel
Andrew J. Kunka; 29. Genre fiction in the graphic novel: the case of
science fiction Karin Kukkonen; 30. The superhero graphic novel Darren
Harris-Fain; 31. Reinvention of the form: Chris Ware and experimentalism
after Raw Martha Kuhlman; 32. Convergence cultures: modern and contemporary
poetry and the graphic novel Daniel Morris; 33. Cinema's discovery of the
graphic novel: mainstream and independent adaptation Matthew P. McAllister
and Stephanie Orme; 34. The novel and the graphic novel Brannon Costello;
35. E-graphic novels Benoît Crucifix and Björn-Olav Dozo; 36. World
literature David M. Ball; Bibliography; Index.
2. The origins of adult graphic narratives: graphic literature and the
novel, from Laurence Sterne to Gustave Doré (1760-1851) Denis Mellier; 3.
Long-length serials in the Golden Age of comic strips: production and
reception Daniel Stein and Lukas Etter; 4. Long length wordless books:
Frans Masereel, Milt Gross, Lynd Ward, and beyond Barbara Postema; 5. The
postwar 'drawn novel' Jan Baetens; 6. Harvey Kurtzman and the influence of
Mad magazine Dan Byrne-Smith; 7. When realism met romance: the negative
zone of Marvel's Silver Age Christopher Pizzino; 8. Beat-era literature and
the graphic novel Hugo Frey; 9. Henry Darger, comics and the graphic novel:
contexts and appropriations Gavin Parkinson; 10. Underground comix and the
invention of autobiography, history and reportage Jean-Paul Gabilliet; 11.
Jules Feiffer - creative and intellectual ally of the graphic novel (and of
other critical/editorial voices) Paul Williams; Part II: 12. Will Eisner
and the making of a contract with God Michael A. Chaney; 13. Art
Spiegelman's autobiographical practice from Maus to MetaMaus Erin
McGlothlin; 14. Alan Moore: the making of a graphic novelist Christopher
Murray; 15. No future: punk and the underground graphic novel Benjamin
Noys; 16. European literary and genre fiction: the (À Suivre) magazine and
the 'adventure' and 'science fiction' traditions (Pratt, Tardi, Moebius)
Fabrice Leroy; 17. 'A word to you feminist women': the parallel legacies of
feminism and underground comics Susan Kirtley; 18. The secret origins of
LBGTQ graphic novels Justin Hall; 19. US creators of color and the
post-underground graphic narrative renaissance Frederick Luis Aldama; 20.
The influence of Manga on the graphic novel Simon Grennan; 21. Sandman, the
ephemeral, and the permanent Joe Sutliff Sanders; 22. 'To elevate every
experience into something artistic and exciting': Daniel Clowes's Ghost
World Ken Parille; 23. From an informed fan culture to an academic field
Randy Duncan and Matthew J. Smith; Part III. 24. Joe Sacco, graphic
novelist as political journalist Ann Miller; 25. The discovery of Marjane
Satrapi and the translation of works from and about the Middle East Chris
Reyns and Houssem Lazreg; 26. Chris Oliveros, drawn and quarterly, and the
expanded definition of the graphic novel Bart Beaty; 27. The Jewish graphic
novel Stephen E. Tabachnick; 28. Crime genre fiction in the graphic novel
Andrew J. Kunka; 29. Genre fiction in the graphic novel: the case of
science fiction Karin Kukkonen; 30. The superhero graphic novel Darren
Harris-Fain; 31. Reinvention of the form: Chris Ware and experimentalism
after Raw Martha Kuhlman; 32. Convergence cultures: modern and contemporary
poetry and the graphic novel Daniel Morris; 33. Cinema's discovery of the
graphic novel: mainstream and independent adaptation Matthew P. McAllister
and Stephanie Orme; 34. The novel and the graphic novel Brannon Costello;
35. E-graphic novels Benoît Crucifix and Björn-Olav Dozo; 36. World
literature David M. Ball; Bibliography; Index.
1. Introduction Jan Baetens, Hugo Frey and Stephen E. Tabachnick; Part I:
2. The origins of adult graphic narratives: graphic literature and the
novel, from Laurence Sterne to Gustave Doré (1760-1851) Denis Mellier; 3.
Long-length serials in the Golden Age of comic strips: production and
reception Daniel Stein and Lukas Etter; 4. Long length wordless books:
Frans Masereel, Milt Gross, Lynd Ward, and beyond Barbara Postema; 5. The
postwar 'drawn novel' Jan Baetens; 6. Harvey Kurtzman and the influence of
Mad magazine Dan Byrne-Smith; 7. When realism met romance: the negative
zone of Marvel's Silver Age Christopher Pizzino; 8. Beat-era literature and
the graphic novel Hugo Frey; 9. Henry Darger, comics and the graphic novel:
contexts and appropriations Gavin Parkinson; 10. Underground comix and the
invention of autobiography, history and reportage Jean-Paul Gabilliet; 11.
Jules Feiffer - creative and intellectual ally of the graphic novel (and of
other critical/editorial voices) Paul Williams; Part II: 12. Will Eisner
and the making of a contract with God Michael A. Chaney; 13. Art
Spiegelman's autobiographical practice from Maus to MetaMaus Erin
McGlothlin; 14. Alan Moore: the making of a graphic novelist Christopher
Murray; 15. No future: punk and the underground graphic novel Benjamin
Noys; 16. European literary and genre fiction: the (À Suivre) magazine and
the 'adventure' and 'science fiction' traditions (Pratt, Tardi, Moebius)
Fabrice Leroy; 17. 'A word to you feminist women': the parallel legacies of
feminism and underground comics Susan Kirtley; 18. The secret origins of
LBGTQ graphic novels Justin Hall; 19. US creators of color and the
post-underground graphic narrative renaissance Frederick Luis Aldama; 20.
The influence of Manga on the graphic novel Simon Grennan; 21. Sandman, the
ephemeral, and the permanent Joe Sutliff Sanders; 22. 'To elevate every
experience into something artistic and exciting': Daniel Clowes's Ghost
World Ken Parille; 23. From an informed fan culture to an academic field
Randy Duncan and Matthew J. Smith; Part III. 24. Joe Sacco, graphic
novelist as political journalist Ann Miller; 25. The discovery of Marjane
Satrapi and the translation of works from and about the Middle East Chris
Reyns and Houssem Lazreg; 26. Chris Oliveros, drawn and quarterly, and the
expanded definition of the graphic novel Bart Beaty; 27. The Jewish graphic
novel Stephen E. Tabachnick; 28. Crime genre fiction in the graphic novel
Andrew J. Kunka; 29. Genre fiction in the graphic novel: the case of
science fiction Karin Kukkonen; 30. The superhero graphic novel Darren
Harris-Fain; 31. Reinvention of the form: Chris Ware and experimentalism
after Raw Martha Kuhlman; 32. Convergence cultures: modern and contemporary
poetry and the graphic novel Daniel Morris; 33. Cinema's discovery of the
graphic novel: mainstream and independent adaptation Matthew P. McAllister
and Stephanie Orme; 34. The novel and the graphic novel Brannon Costello;
35. E-graphic novels Benoît Crucifix and Björn-Olav Dozo; 36. World
literature David M. Ball; Bibliography; Index.
2. The origins of adult graphic narratives: graphic literature and the
novel, from Laurence Sterne to Gustave Doré (1760-1851) Denis Mellier; 3.
Long-length serials in the Golden Age of comic strips: production and
reception Daniel Stein and Lukas Etter; 4. Long length wordless books:
Frans Masereel, Milt Gross, Lynd Ward, and beyond Barbara Postema; 5. The
postwar 'drawn novel' Jan Baetens; 6. Harvey Kurtzman and the influence of
Mad magazine Dan Byrne-Smith; 7. When realism met romance: the negative
zone of Marvel's Silver Age Christopher Pizzino; 8. Beat-era literature and
the graphic novel Hugo Frey; 9. Henry Darger, comics and the graphic novel:
contexts and appropriations Gavin Parkinson; 10. Underground comix and the
invention of autobiography, history and reportage Jean-Paul Gabilliet; 11.
Jules Feiffer - creative and intellectual ally of the graphic novel (and of
other critical/editorial voices) Paul Williams; Part II: 12. Will Eisner
and the making of a contract with God Michael A. Chaney; 13. Art
Spiegelman's autobiographical practice from Maus to MetaMaus Erin
McGlothlin; 14. Alan Moore: the making of a graphic novelist Christopher
Murray; 15. No future: punk and the underground graphic novel Benjamin
Noys; 16. European literary and genre fiction: the (À Suivre) magazine and
the 'adventure' and 'science fiction' traditions (Pratt, Tardi, Moebius)
Fabrice Leroy; 17. 'A word to you feminist women': the parallel legacies of
feminism and underground comics Susan Kirtley; 18. The secret origins of
LBGTQ graphic novels Justin Hall; 19. US creators of color and the
post-underground graphic narrative renaissance Frederick Luis Aldama; 20.
The influence of Manga on the graphic novel Simon Grennan; 21. Sandman, the
ephemeral, and the permanent Joe Sutliff Sanders; 22. 'To elevate every
experience into something artistic and exciting': Daniel Clowes's Ghost
World Ken Parille; 23. From an informed fan culture to an academic field
Randy Duncan and Matthew J. Smith; Part III. 24. Joe Sacco, graphic
novelist as political journalist Ann Miller; 25. The discovery of Marjane
Satrapi and the translation of works from and about the Middle East Chris
Reyns and Houssem Lazreg; 26. Chris Oliveros, drawn and quarterly, and the
expanded definition of the graphic novel Bart Beaty; 27. The Jewish graphic
novel Stephen E. Tabachnick; 28. Crime genre fiction in the graphic novel
Andrew J. Kunka; 29. Genre fiction in the graphic novel: the case of
science fiction Karin Kukkonen; 30. The superhero graphic novel Darren
Harris-Fain; 31. Reinvention of the form: Chris Ware and experimentalism
after Raw Martha Kuhlman; 32. Convergence cultures: modern and contemporary
poetry and the graphic novel Daniel Morris; 33. Cinema's discovery of the
graphic novel: mainstream and independent adaptation Matthew P. McAllister
and Stephanie Orme; 34. The novel and the graphic novel Brannon Costello;
35. E-graphic novels Benoît Crucifix and Björn-Olav Dozo; 36. World
literature David M. Ball; Bibliography; Index.







