BOOM! SPLAT!
BOOM! SPLAT!
Comics and Violence
Coby, Jim; Davis-McElligatt, Joanna
University Press of Mississippi
03/2024
277
Dura
Inglês
9781496850034
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: Here is Violence Galore
Jim Coby and Joanna Davis-McElligatt
Section I. Bang! Histories of Violence
1. Hawk, Dove, Ditko, and Kant: Self-Defense for Superheroes
Sam Cowling
2. Black and White Death: Graphics of Violence from the Great War
Christina M. Knopf
3. A Tale of Two Cuban Cartoonists
Diana Alvarez Amell
4. Archiving the Past, Drawing the Present, and Preserving Displaced Histories of Violence in Nonfictional Graphic Novels
Natalja Chestopalova
Section II. Zzap! Forms of Violence
5. Calvin and Hobbes: A Case Study of the Cartoon Fight Cloud
Jacob Murel
6. White Black Men and Black White Men: Reading Race as Violence in Mat Johnson and Warren Pleece's Incognegro: A Graphic Mystery
Joanna Davis-McElligatt
7. Violence Trying Patience: Daniel Clowes, Gender, Semiotics, and the Duo-Parallel-Critical Alternative to McCloud's World-Image Typology in Comics
Steven S. Vrooman
Section III. Aarrgh! Interpersonal and Collective Violence
8. Gender-Bending Aggression: A Comparative Study of Superheroine Aggression in Hulk (2016), Captain Marvel (2017), and The New Wolverine (2017)
Kiera M. Gaswint
9. Male Authority against Female Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Violence in Comics
Elisabetta Di Minico
10. "It's Football, Sir. It's Worth the Blood": Football and "The Violence That Finds Us" in Aaron and Latour's Southern Bastards
Jim Coby
11. Complex Comics, Complex Trauma: Registration of Traumatized Childhood in the "Autographics" of Phoebe Gloeckner
Partha Bhattacharjee and Priyanka Tripathi
Section IV. Thunk! Political and Social Violence
12. #BlackLivesMatter and Cartooning Racial Violence
Vincent Haddad
13. Radical Empathy in March
Leah Milne
14. "Peace Be with You": The Sheriff of Babylon and Violence in the "War on Terror"
Lawrence Abrams and Kaleb Knoblauch
15. Violence for the Cause: Social Justice and the Need for Representations of Violence
Rita Costello
Acknowledgments
About the Contributors
Index
Jim Coby and Joanna Davis-McElligatt
Section I. Bang! Histories of Violence
1. Hawk, Dove, Ditko, and Kant: Self-Defense for Superheroes
Sam Cowling
2. Black and White Death: Graphics of Violence from the Great War
Christina M. Knopf
3. A Tale of Two Cuban Cartoonists
Diana Alvarez Amell
4. Archiving the Past, Drawing the Present, and Preserving Displaced Histories of Violence in Nonfictional Graphic Novels
Natalja Chestopalova
Section II. Zzap! Forms of Violence
5. Calvin and Hobbes: A Case Study of the Cartoon Fight Cloud
Jacob Murel
6. White Black Men and Black White Men: Reading Race as Violence in Mat Johnson and Warren Pleece's Incognegro: A Graphic Mystery
Joanna Davis-McElligatt
7. Violence Trying Patience: Daniel Clowes, Gender, Semiotics, and the Duo-Parallel-Critical Alternative to McCloud's World-Image Typology in Comics
Steven S. Vrooman
Section III. Aarrgh! Interpersonal and Collective Violence
8. Gender-Bending Aggression: A Comparative Study of Superheroine Aggression in Hulk (2016), Captain Marvel (2017), and The New Wolverine (2017)
Kiera M. Gaswint
9. Male Authority against Female Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Violence in Comics
Elisabetta Di Minico
10. "It's Football, Sir. It's Worth the Blood": Football and "The Violence That Finds Us" in Aaron and Latour's Southern Bastards
Jim Coby
11. Complex Comics, Complex Trauma: Registration of Traumatized Childhood in the "Autographics" of Phoebe Gloeckner
Partha Bhattacharjee and Priyanka Tripathi
Section IV. Thunk! Political and Social Violence
12. #BlackLivesMatter and Cartooning Racial Violence
Vincent Haddad
13. Radical Empathy in March
Leah Milne
14. "Peace Be with You": The Sheriff of Babylon and Violence in the "War on Terror"
Lawrence Abrams and Kaleb Knoblauch
15. Violence for the Cause: Social Justice and the Need for Representations of Violence
Rita Costello
Acknowledgments
About the Contributors
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
cartoons; Censorship; Comix; Gender; Graphic novels; Memory; narratives; Representation; Sequential art; Trauma; Visual language; Social and transformative justice; sexuality; Race; ethnicity; color; Intersectionality; Violence; generational; interpersonal; economic; linguistic; Form; grammar; syntax; Marvel; DC; Superheroes; Independent
Introduction: Here is Violence Galore
Jim Coby and Joanna Davis-McElligatt
Section I. Bang! Histories of Violence
1. Hawk, Dove, Ditko, and Kant: Self-Defense for Superheroes
Sam Cowling
2. Black and White Death: Graphics of Violence from the Great War
Christina M. Knopf
3. A Tale of Two Cuban Cartoonists
Diana Alvarez Amell
4. Archiving the Past, Drawing the Present, and Preserving Displaced Histories of Violence in Nonfictional Graphic Novels
Natalja Chestopalova
Section II. Zzap! Forms of Violence
5. Calvin and Hobbes: A Case Study of the Cartoon Fight Cloud
Jacob Murel
6. White Black Men and Black White Men: Reading Race as Violence in Mat Johnson and Warren Pleece's Incognegro: A Graphic Mystery
Joanna Davis-McElligatt
7. Violence Trying Patience: Daniel Clowes, Gender, Semiotics, and the Duo-Parallel-Critical Alternative to McCloud's World-Image Typology in Comics
Steven S. Vrooman
Section III. Aarrgh! Interpersonal and Collective Violence
8. Gender-Bending Aggression: A Comparative Study of Superheroine Aggression in Hulk (2016), Captain Marvel (2017), and The New Wolverine (2017)
Kiera M. Gaswint
9. Male Authority against Female Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Violence in Comics
Elisabetta Di Minico
10. "It's Football, Sir. It's Worth the Blood": Football and "The Violence That Finds Us" in Aaron and Latour's Southern Bastards
Jim Coby
11. Complex Comics, Complex Trauma: Registration of Traumatized Childhood in the "Autographics" of Phoebe Gloeckner
Partha Bhattacharjee and Priyanka Tripathi
Section IV. Thunk! Political and Social Violence
12. #BlackLivesMatter and Cartooning Racial Violence
Vincent Haddad
13. Radical Empathy in March
Leah Milne
14. "Peace Be with You": The Sheriff of Babylon and Violence in the "War on Terror"
Lawrence Abrams and Kaleb Knoblauch
15. Violence for the Cause: Social Justice and the Need for Representations of Violence
Rita Costello
Acknowledgments
About the Contributors
Index
Jim Coby and Joanna Davis-McElligatt
Section I. Bang! Histories of Violence
1. Hawk, Dove, Ditko, and Kant: Self-Defense for Superheroes
Sam Cowling
2. Black and White Death: Graphics of Violence from the Great War
Christina M. Knopf
3. A Tale of Two Cuban Cartoonists
Diana Alvarez Amell
4. Archiving the Past, Drawing the Present, and Preserving Displaced Histories of Violence in Nonfictional Graphic Novels
Natalja Chestopalova
Section II. Zzap! Forms of Violence
5. Calvin and Hobbes: A Case Study of the Cartoon Fight Cloud
Jacob Murel
6. White Black Men and Black White Men: Reading Race as Violence in Mat Johnson and Warren Pleece's Incognegro: A Graphic Mystery
Joanna Davis-McElligatt
7. Violence Trying Patience: Daniel Clowes, Gender, Semiotics, and the Duo-Parallel-Critical Alternative to McCloud's World-Image Typology in Comics
Steven S. Vrooman
Section III. Aarrgh! Interpersonal and Collective Violence
8. Gender-Bending Aggression: A Comparative Study of Superheroine Aggression in Hulk (2016), Captain Marvel (2017), and The New Wolverine (2017)
Kiera M. Gaswint
9. Male Authority against Female Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Violence in Comics
Elisabetta Di Minico
10. "It's Football, Sir. It's Worth the Blood": Football and "The Violence That Finds Us" in Aaron and Latour's Southern Bastards
Jim Coby
11. Complex Comics, Complex Trauma: Registration of Traumatized Childhood in the "Autographics" of Phoebe Gloeckner
Partha Bhattacharjee and Priyanka Tripathi
Section IV. Thunk! Political and Social Violence
12. #BlackLivesMatter and Cartooning Racial Violence
Vincent Haddad
13. Radical Empathy in March
Leah Milne
14. "Peace Be with You": The Sheriff of Babylon and Violence in the "War on Terror"
Lawrence Abrams and Kaleb Knoblauch
15. Violence for the Cause: Social Justice and the Need for Representations of Violence
Rita Costello
Acknowledgments
About the Contributors
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
cartoons; Censorship; Comix; Gender; Graphic novels; Memory; narratives; Representation; Sequential art; Trauma; Visual language; Social and transformative justice; sexuality; Race; ethnicity; color; Intersectionality; Violence; generational; interpersonal; economic; linguistic; Form; grammar; syntax; Marvel; DC; Superheroes; Independent