awp 2013 panel: comics as legitimate literature
DESCRIPTION
From AWP 2013 Boston: S211. Video Games, Fan Fiction, & Comics: Alternative Genres as Legitimate Literature Alternative forms of narrative are often perceived with disdain or suspicion even though they address the same plots, themes, and conditions of respectable literary forms. Comics have begun to break away from this stigma, but what about more mainstream genres, such as fan fiction and video games? How do all three of these alternative forms both threaten and reinforce ideas about originality and narrative? This panel will make the case for alternative genres as creative literature. To listen to the entire panel, visit: https://soundcloud.com/lesliesalas-2/fan-fiction-video-games-comicsTRANSCRIPT
Video Games, Fan Fiction, & Comics: Alternative Genres as Legitimate Literature
Saturday, March 9 - 3p to 4:15p Room 103, Hynes Convention Center
AWP Boston 2013
By: Leslie Salas, Elaine Phillips, & Kirsten Holt.
*Jim Miller is unable to attend.
What do we mean by “comics”?
What do we mean by “comics”?
• comics, graphic narrative, visual storytelling, sequential art
What do we mean by “comics”?
According to Scott McCloud, comics are:
What do we mean by “comics”?
• comics, graphic narrative, visual storytelling, sequential art
• “juxtaposed pictorial and other images in deliberate sequence, intended to convey information and/or to produce an aesthetic response in the viewer.”
According toDouglas Wolk,comics historyhas deep roots.
• Simonides of Keos’s:“poema pictura loquens, pictura poema silens”
• “poetry is a verbal picture; painting is a silent poetry”
• Horace: “ut pictura poesis”
• “as is painting, so is poetry”
Academic Research
Some samples of current research.
Academic Research
Academic Research
Academic Research
Academic Research
Academic Research
Academic Research
Academic Research
Academic Research
Academic Research
Mainstream Appeal
Movie Adaptations
Mainstream Appeal
Movie Adaptations
Mainstream Appeal
Classics Adaptations
Mainstream Appeal
Classics Adaptations
Other Types of Comics
Besides the American comics we are used to
Manga
Bandes Dessinées
A Brief History
of where comics came from
A Brief History
Single-panel captioned illustrations
A Brief History
Magritte’s famous painting
A Brief History
Gag strips
A Brief History
Propaganda - Tijuana Bibles
A Brief History
More WWII Propaganda
(note how Captain America is punching Hitler in the face)
We Live in a Visually Literate Society
(all of these shapes should be familiar to you)
Comics challenges us to read in new ways
(for instance, panels are read from right to left in manga)
(American and European comics are read from left to right)
Comics provides new ways of expressing internality
In the Classroom
(this is an excellent resource)
In the Classroom
(and so is it’s sequel)
Reading comics interests and challenges students!
We should look for more ways to incorporate comics in our curricula!
For the audio that goes along with this presentation,please visit
https://soundcloud.com/lesliesalas-2/fan-fiction-video-games-comics
Thank you!