Litcomix
Literary Theory and the Graphic Novel
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- 30,99 €
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- 30,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Critical studies of the graphic novel have often employed methodologies taken from film theory and art criticism. Yet, as graphic novels from Maus to Watchmen have entered the literary canon, perhaps the time has come to develop theories for interpreting and evaluating graphic novels that are drawn from classic models of literary theory and criticism.
Using the methodology of Georg Lukács and his detailed defense of literary realism as a socially embedded practice, Litcomix tackles difficult questions about reading graphic novels as literature. What critical standards should we use to measure the quality of a graphic novel? How does the genre contribute to our understanding of ourselves and the world? What qualities distinguish it from other forms of literature?
LitComix hones its theoretical approach through case studies taken from across the diverse world of comics, from Yoshihiro Tatsumi’s groundbreaking manga to the Hernandez Brothers’ influential alt-comix. Whether looking at graphic novel adaptations of Proust or considering how Jack Kirby’s use of intertextuality makes him the Balzac of comics, this study offers fresh perspectives on how we might appreciate graphic novels as literature.
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"Can there be a theory of the graphic novel that is commensurate with literary theory?" ask Geczy (The Artificial Body in Fashion and Art), an art professor at the University of Sydney, and McBurnie, director of the Rockhampton Museum of Art, in this thoughtful if discursive defense of comics. Answering in the affirmative, the authors provide close readings of comics by Nina Bunjevac, the Hernandez brothers, and Simon Hanselmann, among others, while establishing a methodology for evaluating graphic novels as literary works—though the extended discourse on such theorists as Fredric Jameson and G.W.F. Hegel sometimes loses sight of the ostensible focus on graphic novels, despite yielding some astute insights. For instance, the authors suggest that György Lukács's theory of the novel reveals how such comics as The Boys and Watchmen depict the "interplay between heroism and madness... writ large." The authors fare better in their close readings, as when they contend that influential Marvel artist Jack Kirby's speedy drawing habits contributed to the propulsive "narrative tempo" of his works, or that the bathetic comics of Robert Crumb subvert the traditional "rousing ending" of the bildungsroman. Though the dry, academic prose lacks the excitement of the works discussed, this makes a persuasive case for the artistic integrity of graphic novels.