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Comics and the City: Urban Space in Print, Picture and Sequence

Editat de Jörn Ahrens, Dr Arno Meteling
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 mai 2010
Comics emerged parallel to, and in several ways intertwined with, the development of modern urban mass societies at the turn of the 20th century. On the one hand, urban topoi, self-portrayals, forms of urban cultural memories, and variant readings of the city (strolling, advertising, architecture, detective stories, mass phenomena, street life, etc.) are all incorporated into comics. On the other hand, comics have unique abilities to capture urban space and city life because of their hybrid nature, consisting of words, pictures, and sequences. These formal aspects of comics are also to be found within the cityscape itself: one can see the influence of comic book aesthetics all around us today. With chapters on the very earliest comic strips, and on artists as diverse as Alan Moore, Carl Barks, Will Eisner and Jacques Tardi, Comics and the City is an important new collection of international scholarship that will help to define the field for many years to come.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780826440198
ISBN-10: 0826440193
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 25
Dimensiuni: 155 x 227 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

This book contains a strong collection of essays on a subject that hasn't yet received much attention in Comics Studies.

Cuprins

Jörn Ahrens and Arno Meteling: IntroductionI. History, Comics, and the City1. Jens Balzer: "Hully Gee, I'm a Hieroglyphe" - Mobilizing the Gaze and the Invention of Comics in New York City, 18952. Ole Frahm: Every Window Tells a Story: Remarks on the Urbanity of Early Comic Strips3. Anthony Enns: The City as Archive in Jason Lutes' BerlinII. Retrofuturistic and Nostalgic Cities4. Henry Jenkins: "The Tomorrow that Never Was" - Retrofuturism in the Comics of Dean Motter5. Stefanie Diekmann: Remembrance of Things to Come: François Schuiten and Benoît Peeters' Cities of the Fantastic6. Michael Cuntz: Paris au pluriel: Depictions of the French Capital in Jacques Tardi's Comic Book WritingIII. Superhero Cities7. William Uricchio: The Batman's Gotham CityT: Story, Ideology, Performance8. Arno Meteling: A Tale of Two Cities: Politics, and Superheroics in Starman and Ex Machina9. Anthony Lioi: The Radiant City: New York as Ecotopia in Promethea, Book V10. Jason Bainbridge: "I am New York" - Spider-Man, New York City, and the Marvel UniverseIV. Locations of Crime11. Greg M. Smith: Will Eisner, Vaudevillian of the Cityscape12. Björn Quiring: "A Fiction That We Must Inhabit" - Sense Production in Urban Spaces According to Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell's From Hell13. Jörn Ahrens: The Ordinary Urban: 100 Bullets and the Clichés of Mass CultureV. The City-Comic as a Mode of Reflection14. André Suhr: Seeing the City through a Frame: Marc-Antoine Mathieu's Acquefacques-Comics15. Andreas Platthaus: Calisota or Bust: Duckburg vs. Entenhausen in the Comics of Carl Barks16. Thomas Becker: Enki Bilal's Woman Trap: Reflections on Authorship under the Shifting Boundaries between Order and Terror in the Cities

Recenzii

"This rich collection -- as multi-faceted as the twentieth-century city itself -- proves that comics are a remarkably apposite medium to convey the rich multiplicity of the urban environment. Essays here take up the ways that comics have engaged with urban language, the spatial and temporal experience of city life, aspirational (and dystopian) visual designs, and a broad range of urban types. The range of topics is remarkable, and the scholarship is first rate." -- Scott Bukatman, author of Matters of Gravity: Special Effects & Supermen in the 20th Century
Lucidly written and critically sophisticated, these essays brilliantly chart the myriad connections between comics and the urban landscapes where they were born. With cutting-edge critical readings that range freely across historical periods, narrative genres and national boundaries, Comics and the City pulls off the remarkable feat of being at once tightly focused and intellectually expansive.  This volume belongs on the bookshelf of anyone who already cares about comics and anyone interested in finding out how smart comics can be. --Joseph "Rusty" Witek, Stetson University; author of Comic Books as History: The Narrative Art of Jack Jackson, Art Spiegelman and Harvey Pekar
'There is an obvious affinity between comics and the city that this welcome collection of essays explores at length from a variety of disciplinary perspectives... The anthology is broken down thematically rather than chronologically, and works all the better for it...this is an important and necessary intervention in a burgeoning area of studies.'