BOBC

WIKINDX Resources  

Gavaler, Chris. The Comics Form: The Art of Sequenced Images. New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2022. 
Added by: joachim (25/02/2022, 10:38)   Last edited by: joachim (24/01/2024, 17:22)
Resource type: Book
Language: en: English
DOI: 10.5040/9781350245945
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 9781350245914
BibTeX citation key: Gavaler2022
Email resource to friend
View all bibliographic details
Categories: General
Keywords: Definition, Narratology, Semiotics, Sequentiality
Creators: Gavaler
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic (New York)
Views: 27/1371
Attachments   Table of Contents [2/26]
Abstract
Answering foundational questions like "what is a comic" and "how do comics work" in original and imaginative ways, this book adapts established, formalist approaches to explaining the experience of reading comics. Taking stock of a multitude of case studies and examples, The Comics Form demonstrates that any object can be read as a comic so long as it displays a set of relevant formal features. Drawing from the worlds of art criticism and literary studies to put forward innovative new ways of thinking and talking about comics, this book challenges certain terminology and such theorizing terms as 'narrate' which have historically been employed somewhat loosely.
In unpacking the way in which sequenced images work, The Comics Form introduces tools of analysis such as discourse and diegesis; details further qualities of visual representation such as resemblance, custom norms, style, simplification, exaggeration, style modes, transparency and specification, perspective and framing, focalization and ocularization; and applies formal art analysis to comics images. This book also examines the conclusions readers draw from the way certain images are presented and what they trigger, and offers clear definitions of the roles and features of text-narrators, image-narrators, and image-text narrators in both non-linguistic images and word-images.
  
WIKINDX 6.8.2 | Total resources: 14513 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: Modern Language Association (MLA)