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Katsiadas, Nick. Romanticism in Comics: Faith, Myth, and Mood. Comics Studies Monograph. Rochester: RIT, 2022. 
Added by: joachim (18/03/2025, 13:27)   Last edited by: joachim (18/03/2025, 14:16)
Resource type: Book
Language: en: English
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 9781939125934
BibTeX citation key: Katsiadas2022
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Promethea", "The Sandman", "The Unwritten", Carey. Mike, Gaiman. Neil, Gross. Peter, Intertextuality, Literature, Moore. Alan, Myth, United Kingdom, USA, Williams III. J.H.
Creators: Katsiadas
Publisher: RIT (Rochester)
Views: 154/1887
Attachments   URLs   https://muse.jhu.edu/book/114714
Abstract
Comics studies scholars engaging comparative mythology tend to limit critical approaches to superhero fiction and classical and religious texts. Even the popular argument that superheroes are a “modern mythology” typically does not venture outside these limitations. Tolkien’s legendarium, Lovecraft’s mythos, Tennyson’s revisions to Arthurian myth, and Blake’s mythology don’t quite fit the creative models that prevailing criticism considers in comparative studies. Nick Katsiadas explores a greater literary history of myth in comics in his examinations of Neil Gaiman’s Sandman, Alan Moore and J. H. Williams III’s Promethea, and Mike Carey and Peter Gross’s The Unwritten. The Romantics particularly used myth to highlight ideas about the value of imagination and creativity, and Katsiadas traces how these ways of thinking about literature and the arts persisted up through twentieth- and twenty-first-century comics. In this way, Romanticism in Comics helps us better understand comics’ greater literary history and, also, helps us reread and better situate Romanticism’s legacy in twentieth- and twenty-first-century art forms and ways of life.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Romanticism in Comics: Faith, Myth, and Mood (1)

Chapter 1: Dreaming Kin: Neil Gaiman’s Sandman, G.K. Chesterton, and Romantic Faith (33)
Chapter 2: “Imagination’s blaze in mankind’s dark”: Promethea, the Hermetic Imagination, and Modern Enchantment (63)
Chapter 3: “And of all these things the Albino whale was the symbol. Wonder ye then at the fiery hunt?”: The Unwritten, Romantic Organicism, and Paranoia (87)
Conclusion: Mood in Comics (97)

Bibliography (105)
Index (114)


Added by: joachim  Last edited by: joachim
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