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
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This collection provides the complete history of the graphic novel, including detailed analyses of its origins, rise and success.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Cambridge History of the Graphic Novel176,99 €
- Jan BaetensThe Graphic Novel87,99 €
- Laura Marcus / Peter Nicholls (eds.)The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century English Literature301,99 €
- The Cambridge Companion to the Novel94,99 €
- The Cambridge History of Science Fiction201,99 €
- April LondonThe Cambridge Introduction to the Eighteenth-Century Novel24,99 €
- The Cambridge History of Modernism59,99 €
-
-
-
This collection provides the complete history of the graphic novel, including detailed analyses of its origins, rise and success.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
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
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- 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
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
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.