BOBC |
Resource type: Book Language: en: English ID no. (ISBN etc.): 978-1-4438-7086-3 BibTeX citation key: Cortsen2015 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: Collection of essays Creators: Cortsen, La Cour, Magnussen Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publ. (Newcastle upon Tyne) |
Views: 5/1039
|
Attachments | URLs Introduction |
Abstract |
Many introductions to comics scholarship books begin with an anecdote recounting the author’s childhood experiences reading comics, thereby testifying to the power of comics to engage and impact youth, but comics and power are intertwined in a numbers of ways that go beyond concern for children’s reading habits. Comics and Power presents very different methods of studying the complex and diverse relationship between comics and power. Divided into three sections, its 14 chapters discuss how comics interact with, reproduce, and/or challenge existing power structures – from the comics medium and its institutions to discourses about art, subjectivity, identity, and communities. The contributors and their work, as such, represent a new generation of comics research that combines the study of comics as a unique art form with a focus on the ways in which comics – like any other medium – participate in shaping the societies of which they are part.
Table of Contents List of Illustrations (viii) Anne Magnussen, Erin La Cour and Rikke Platz Cortsen: Introduction (xvii) Part I: Power and Institutionalization: Shifting Cultural and Medial Perceptions Part II: Power and the Subject: Exposing the Politics of Subjectivity and Identity |