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Displaying 1 - 9  of 9 (Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography)
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Camus, Cyril. "Forêts symboliques de la bande dessinée fantastique américaine contemporaine." Otrante (2010).   
Added by: joachim 10/12/21, 1:02 PM
Camus, Cyril. "Neil Gaiman: A portrait of the artist as a disciple of Alan Moore." Studies in Comics 2. (2011): 147–57.   
Added by: joachim   Last edited by: joachim 12/3/12, 7:52 PM
Cantrell, Sarah. "Feminist Subjectivity in Neil Gaiman’s Black Orchid." Feminism in the Worlds of Neil Gaiman. Essays on the Comics, Poetry and Prose. Eds. Tara Prescott and Aaron Drucker. Jefferson, London: McFarland, 2012. 102–15.   
Added by: joachim 8/8/13, 5:20 PM
Christopher, Brandon. "“I will not / be haunted / by myself!”: Originality, Derivation, and the Hauntology of the Superhero Comic." Seriality and Texts for Young People. The Compulsion to Repeat. Eds. Mavis Reimer, et al. Critical Approaches to Children’s Literature. New York [etc.]: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014. 166–87.   
Added by: joachim 9/16/20, 8:30 PM
Hancock, Mary. "Black Orchid Reborn: Neil Gaiman’s Feminist Superhero." Language Arts Journal of Michigan 29. 1 2013. Accessed 17Jan. 2021. <https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/lajm/vol29/iss1/10/>.   
Added by: joachim 1/17/21, 4:59 PM
Martin, Rachel R. "Speaking the Cacophony of Angels: Gaiman’s Women and the Fracturing of Phallocentric Discourse." Feminism in the Worlds of Neil Gaiman. Essays on the Comics, Poetry and Prose. Eds. Tara Prescott and Aaron Drucker. Jefferson, London: McFarland, 2012. 11–31.   
Added by: joachim 8/8/13, 10:31 AM
Round, Julia. "“Can I call you Mommy?”: Myths of the feminine and superheroic in Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean’s Black Orchid." Debating the Difference. Gender, Representation and Self-Representation. Ed. Rachel Jones. Dundee: Duncan of Jordanstone College, University of Dundee, 2010.   
Added by: joachim 4/11/12, 9:59 AM
Sheppeard, Sallye. "Entering the Green: Imaginal Space in Black Orchid." The Contemporary Comic Book Superhero. Ed. Angela Ndalianis. Routledge Research in Cultural and Media Studies. London, New York: Routledge, 2009. 205–15.   
Added by: joachim   Last edited by: joachim 8/4/10, 2:40 PM
Tembo, Kwasu. "Sons of Lilith: The Portrayal and Characterization of Women in the Apocryphal Comics of Neil Gaiman, Alan Moore, and Grant Morrison." Corpus Mundi 1. 2 2020. Accessed 17Jan. 2021. <https://corpusmundi.com ... php/cmj/article/view/14>.   
Added by: joachim   Last edited by: joachim 1/17/21, 4:37 PM
WIKINDX 6.10.2 | Total resources: 14647 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: Modern Language Association (MLA)