The Language of Comics: Word and Image


Price:
Sale price$43.75

Description

In our culture, which depends increasingly on images of instruction and recreation, it is important to ask hwo words and images make imeaning when they are combined. Comics, one of the most widely read media oif the twentitth century, serves as an ideal for focusing on an investigation on the word-and-image question.

This collection of essays attempts to give an answer. The first six see words and images as separate art forms that play with or against each other. David Kunzle finds that words restrict the meaning of the art of Adolphe Willette and Theophile-Alexandre Steinlen in Le Chat Noir David A. Berona, examining wordless novels, argues that the ability to read pictures depends on the ability to read words. Todd Taylor draws on classical rhetoric to demonstrate that images in The Road Runner are more persuasive that words.

N. C. Christopher Couch--writing on The Yellow Kid--and Robert C. Harvey--discussing early New Yorker cartoons--are both interest

Author: Robin Varnum
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Published: 01/15/2002
Pages: 222
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.86lbs
Size: 8.58h x 6.48w x 0.68d
ISBN13: 9781578064144
ISBN10: 1578064147
BISAC Categories:
- Humor | General
- Comics & Graphic Novels | General

About the Author
Robin Varnum, an instructor of English at the American International College in Springfield, Massachusetts, has been published in Writing on the Edge, Journal of Advanced Composition, Harvard Library Bulletin, and Rhetoric Society Quarterly. Christina T. Gibbons has been published in Journal of Regional Cultures.