Seeing Comics through Art History: Alternative Approaches to the Form

Seeing Comics through Art History: Alternative Approaches to the Form

Seeing Comics through Art History: Alternative Approaches to the Form

Seeing Comics through Art History: Alternative Approaches to the Form

eBook1st ed. 2022 (1st ed. 2022)

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Overview

This book explores what the methodologies of Art History might offer Comics Studies, in terms of addressing overlooked aspects of aesthetics, form, materiality, perception and visual style. As well as considering what Art History proposes of comic scholarship, including the questioning of some of its deep-rooted categories and procedures, it also appraises what comics and Comics Studies afford and ask of Art History. This book draws together the work of international scholars applying art-historical methodologies to the study of a range of comic strips, books, cartoons, graphic novels and manga, who, as well as being researchers, are also educators, artists, designers, curators, producers, librarians, editors, and writers, with some undertaking practice-based research. Many are trained art historians, but others come from, have migrated into, or straddle other disciplines, such as Comparative Literature, American Literature, Cultural Studies, Visual Studies, and a rangeof subjects within Art&Design practice.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783030935078
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Publication date: 06/17/2022
Series: Palgrave Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 175 MB
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About the Author

Maggie Gray lectures in Critical&Historical Studies at Kingston University, UK with a specialism in comics, cartooning, and visual narrative. She is author of Alan Moore, Out from the Underground: Cartooning, Performance and Dissent (Palgrave Macmillan 2017).

Ian Horton is a Reader in Graphic Communication and a founder member of the Comics Research Hub (CoRH!!) at the University of the Arts London, UK. He is Associate Editor of the Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics and his research is focused on comic books, graphic design and illustration.


Table of Contents

Ways of Seeing Comics: Art-Historical Approaches to the Form.- Part I Old Skool Art History.- The Lives of the Artists.- Connoisseurship, Attribution, and Comic Strip Art: The Case of Jack B. Yeats.- Reading Comics with Aby Warburg: Collaging Memories.- Part II Perception, Reception and Meaning.- Psychologies of Perception: Stories of Depiction.- Aesthetics of Reception: Uncovering the Modes of Interaction in Comics.- Reading Richard Felton Outcault’s “Yellow Kid” Through Perception of the Image.- Colour in Comics: Reading Lorenzo Mattotti Through the Lens of Art History.- Part III The New and Newer Art Histories.- Feminist Art History as an Approach to Research on Comics: Meta Reflections on Studies of Swedish Feminist Comics.- Towards Feminist Comics Studies: Feminist Art History and the Study of Women’s Comix in the 1970s in the United States.- Real Queer Bodies: Visual Weight and Imagined Gravity in Sport Manga.- Part IV Comics for/Beyond Art History.- Afrofuturism and Animism as Method: Art History and Decolonisation in Black Panther.- What Is an Image? Art History, Visual Culture Studies, and Comics Studies.- From Giotto to Drnaso: The Common Well of Pictorial Schema in ‘High’ Art and ‘Low’ Comics.- VAST/O Exhibition (De)Construction: Exploring the Potentials of Augmented Abstract Comics and Animation Installations as a Method to Communicate Health Experiences.- From Tableau to Sequence: Introducing Comics Theory Within Art History to Study the Photobook.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Comics studies has become a new laboratory of interdisciplinary research and the collection by Gray and Horton is a vital contribution to that fundamental change. By opening a two-way dialogue between comics and art history, it outstandingly demonstrates what comics scholars can learn from art historians and, perhaps more surprisingly, how art historians can further challenge and rethink the very basics of their own discipline.” (Jan Baetens, Professor of Cultural Studies, University of Leuven, Belgium)

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