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Nolan, Val. "Break free: Understanding, reimagining and reclaiming stories in Grant Morrison’s Seven Soldiers of Victory." Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics 6.(2015): 42–58. 
Added by: joachim (11/10/2014, 16:39)   Last edited by: joachim (22/10/2016, 17:07)
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.1080/21504857.2014.960094
BibTeX citation key: Nolan2015
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Seven Soldiers of Victory", Character, Metaisierung, Morrison. Grant, Superhero, United Kingdom
Creators: Nolan
Collection: Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics
Views: 11/488
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Abstract
This article investigates Grant Morrison’s Seven Soldiers of Victory (2005–06. New York: DC Comics) as a metafictional treatise on the writing and reading of comic books in general and the superhero genre in particular. It examines how Seven Soldiers functions as Morrison’s commentary on the way contemporary culture tells stories, the way we interpret, reject and ultimately reclaim our role in narratives, ranging from the intimate to the ‘end of the world drama’. In the process, a paradigm for interpreting this landmark series is suggested, one whereby each component speaks to an aspect of the comic-book reading/writing experience: Zatanna, the mainstream comic reader; Bulleteer, the new reader; Frankenstein, the process of reimagining; Shining Knight, a reimagined end product; Klarion, the juvenile reader resistant to adult notions of seriousness; the Guardian, the adult reader recapturing their imagination; and Mister Miracle, the link between Seven Soldiers and Morrison’s wider superhero writings.
  
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