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Multimodal Comics

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13 March 2024
Comics have always embraced a diversity of formats, existing in complex relationships to other media, and been dynamic in their response to new technologies and means of distribution. This collection explores interactions between comics, other media and technologies, employing a wide range of theoretical and critical perspectives.
By focusing on key critical concepts within multimodality (transmediality, adaptation, intertextuality) and addressing multiple platforms and media (digital, analogue, music, prose, linguistics, graphics), it expands and develops existing comics theory and also addresses multiple other media and disciplines.
Over the last decade Studies in Comics has been at the forefront of international research in comics. This volume showcases some of the best research to appear in the journal. In so doing it demonstrates the evolution of Comics Studies over the last decade and shows how this research field has engaged with various media and technologies in a continuously evolving artistic and production environment. The theme of multimodality is particularly apt since media and technologies have changed significantly during this period. The collection will thus give a view of the ways in which comics scholars have engaged with multimodality during a time when “modes” were continually changing.

COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS / General, Graphic novels, LITERARY CRITICISM / Comics & Graphic Novels, LITERARY CRITICISM / General, Literary theory, Communication studies

List of Figures
Foreword
Roger Sabin
Introduction
Madeline B. Gangnes, Christopher Murray, and Julia Round
SECTION ONE: MULTIPLICITY AND (INTER)TEXTUALITY
- The Shape of Comic Book Reading
A. David Lewis
- Re-inventing the Origins of the Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up: Regis Loisel’s Peter Pan
Armelle Blin-Rolland
- The Myth of Eco: Cultural Populism and Comics Studies
Marc Singer
- Intertwining Verbal and Visual Elements in Printed Narratives for Adults
Pascal Lefèvre
SECTION TWO: METACOMICS AND THE DIGITAL
- Spiegelman’s Magic Box: MetaMaus and the Archive of Representation
Elisabeth R. Friedman
- Meaning from Movement: Blurring the Temporal Border between Animation and Comics
Joshua Gowdy
SECTION THREE: LINGUISTICS AND LANGUAGE
- Narrative, Language, and Comics-as-Literature
Hannah Miodrag
- The Cognitive Grammar of ‘I’: Viewing Arrangements in Graphic Autobiographies
Christian W. Schneider
SECTION FOUR: SOUND AND VISION
- Sound Affects: Visualizing Music, Musicians, and (Sub)Cultural Identity in BECK and Scott Pilgrim
Camilo Diaz Pino
- The Musicalization of Graphic Narratives and P. Craig Russell’s Graphic Novel Operas, 'The Magic Flute' and 'Salome'
Victoria Addis
SECTION FIVE: FROM MATERIAL TO TRANSTEXTUAL AND BEYOND
- 'Animating' the Narrative in Abstract Comics
Paul Fisher Davies
- Multimodal Duck-Rabbitry: Multistable Perception and the Narrative Potential of Fold-Ins
Thomas Hamlyn-Harris and Ross Watkins
- Resisting Narrative Immersion
Greice Schneider
- Square Eyes: Augmenting Bodies, Boredom, and Things
Merlyn Seller
Afterword
Madeline B. Gangnes, Christopher Murray, and Julia Round
Notes on Contributors
Index