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Singer, Marc. "Embodiments of the Real: The Counterlinguistic Turn in the Comic-Book Novel." Critique. Studies in Contemporary Fiction 49.(2008): 273–90. 
Added by: joachim (20/07/2009, 01:34)   Last edited by: joachim (21/10/2009, 11:35)
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.3200/CRIT.49.3.273-290
BibTeX citation key: Singer2008a
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Categories: General
Keywords: Comics in literature, Intermediality, Literature, Visual Culture
Creators: Singer
Collection: Critique. Studies in Contemporary Fiction
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Abstract
Novels written about comic books possess a unique representational potential. Although many of these novels treat comics chiefly as sources of readymade metaphors, authors such as Rick Moody and Michael Chabon have expanded their figural lexicon. As serial narratives, comic books present novelists with a form of metonymic combination that can conflate or arrest time; as visual narratives, they offer the possibility of escaping conventional linguistic signification. The novels that translate these figurative strategies to prose use comics to challenge some of the most basic tenets of the linguistic turn of twentieth-century critical theory.
Added by: joachim  Last edited by: joachim
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