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Groth, Gary, ed. Sparring With Gil Kane: Debating The History and Aesthetics of Comics. Seattle: Fantagraphics, 2018. 
Added by: joachim (05/03/2018, 19:02)   
Resource type: Book
Language: en: English
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 978-1-68396-071-3
BibTeX citation key: Groth2018
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Categories: General
Keywords: Collection of essays, Interview, Kane. Gil, USA
Creators: Groth
Publisher: Fantagraphics (Seattle)
Views: 16/447
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Abstract
Gil Kane drew every major comic book character in his 50-year career — from Spider-Man and the Hulk to Superman and Batman — and conceived and drew independent “graphic novels” long before the term had any meaning to the larger public. He was also a fascinating raconteur and a formidable analyst, critic, and theorist of comics, a medium he loved.
Kane was as good a talker as he was a draughtsman, infinitely curious about the comics form and just as critical of the industry itself, and would seize any opportunity to engage with other artists about the subjects he was most passionate about. Included in this collection are interviews conducted by Kane with a wide array of cartoonists: newspaper strip artists Hal Foster (Prince Valiant), Walt Kelly (Pogo), and Noel Sickles (Scorchy Smith); fellow comics creators Harvey Kurtzman, Bill Everett, Denny O’Neil, Howard Chaykin, and Walt Simonson; underground cartoonists Robert Crumb and Jack Jackson; and the literary critic Donald Phelps.
These conversations range from the collegial to the contentious. On full display is Kane’s critical acuity, trademark wit, vast knowledge of popular culture, and a civilized eagerness to engage in opinions contrary to his own. His objective was to gain insight into the medium and the artists who worked within it. Sparring with Gil Kane is practically a Master Class on the comics form.
  
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