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Translating Chris Ware's <i>Lint</i> into RussianDavis, Matthew 12 July 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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FREUDIAN STRIPS: COMICS, MENTAL HEALTH, AND THE “PSYCHOLOGIZATION OF AMERICA”Zullo, Valentino L. 14 April 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Style Made Visible: Reanimating Composition Studies Through ComicsCohen, Michelle Fern 11 September 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Lines of Thought : drawing seeing talking feelingCosta, Beatriz January 2022 (has links)
/Drawing/ is a noun, /drawing/ is a verb. A drawing is a finished visual expression, but it’s also an action: the exploration and expression of a thought on a surface. What if we communicated more through drawings? What if we could ~read~ them? What if we could name lines and say words about why we like them? And what if everyone felt empowered to do it? “Lines of Thought” is a graphic essay about Visual Literacy and Graphic Communication. A theory and practice book to enable people to draw, appreciate images and develop aesthetic taste and critique. This project comes from my own passion for drawing, visual culture, and education in the graphic arts. I wish to share this passion with a broad audience by exploring philosophically what it takes to draw and see images, how this should not be a skill of a few and make it more democratic.
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Ethno-Graphic Gatherings of Nonbinary Visual Narratives on TikTokCostain, Raey 07 September 2022 (has links)
This thesis is an exploration in graphic anthropology alongside a digital community of nonbinary people on the social media app, TikTok. Nonbinary visuality is a complicated and still poorly understood set of experiences largely due to a lack of thoughtful representation in both academic and non-academic circles. This work applies comic-style drawing to gather nonbinary visual narratives as they are shared digitally. In doing so, this work contributes to an understanding of what it might mean to ‘look’ nonbinary.
Between September 2021-May 2022 I conducted a digital ethnography on TikTok. I applied comic drawing as my primary mode of notetaking and communicating about my experiences. I also recruited 5 nonbinary social media mutuals who each contributed 1-6 video clips to my project. Informed by these video clips and my own auto-ethnographic experiences on the app, I created a collection of comic style drawings. Selections of these drawings were shared on social media (@enbyanthro) and through an interactive documentary housed on my project website (nbvisualnarratives.ca).
Throughout my work here, I consider drawing as a process of gathering - of bringing together and being together. As I gathered individual nonbinary narratives through my drawing method I connected those stories to broader dialogues about being nonbinary. The ethno-graphic gatherings discussed here are made up of both personal narratives and shared experiences, brought together through the process of drawing. / Graduate
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Comics About Organs: Social Support and Graphic Medicine in The Awkward YetiGibb, Jacob 12 April 2024 (has links) (PDF)
Comic strips have always been a medium for more than humor. Many comic strips published on social media sites address mental health issues. Despite their popularity, the field of graphic medicine, which examines the intersection of health care and comics, has seen little to no examination of how these comics function on social media. Utilizing the popular comic The Awkward Yeti, this research examines how the rhetorical devices of comics make them an ideal medium for communicating about mental health issues and providing social support to social media users. This study conducts a content analysis of 15 Instagram posts from The Awkward Yeti. Employing a modified version of Cuatrona & Suhr's Social Support Behavior Code (SSBC), three dimensions of social support were measured: information support, emotional support, and network support. The results revealed emotional support and network support to be the most frequently utilized dimensions of social support found in comments on The Awkward Yeti's posts. Additionally, the results suggest that for comics to be effective as a means of social support and mental health education on social media, they must be grounded in authentic experiences and should provoke emotional responses from social media users.
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Worlds Will Live, Worlds Will Die: Myth, Metatext, Continuity and Cataclysm in DC Comics’ <cite>Crisis on Infinite Earths</cite>Murdough, Adam C. 27 June 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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The Anxious Aardvark Sees the Light: Divine Masculinity in Dave Sim's <i>Cerebus</i>Mayeux, Isaac J. 16 May 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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A (Graphic) Novel Idea for Social Justice: Comics, Critical Theory, and A Contextual Graphic NarratologyGrice, Karly Marie January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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"Archie's Girls?" Betty, Veronica, and the Rise of American Youth Culture, 1941-1950Johnson, Caroline E. 29 April 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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